Abstract

Post-stroke patients exhibit distinct muscle activation electromyography (EMG) features in sit-to-stand (STS) due to motor deficiency. Muscle activation amplitude, related to muscle tension and muscle synergy activation levels, is one of the defining EMG features that reflects post-stroke motor functioning and motor impairment. Although some qualitative findings are available, it is not clear if and how muscle activation amplitude-related biomechanical attributes may quantitatively reflect during subacute stroke rehabilitation. To better enable a longitudinal investigation into a patient's muscle activation changes during rehabilitation or an inter-subject comparison, EMG normalization is usually applied. However, current normalization methods using maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) or within-task peak/mean EMG may not be feasible when MVC cannot be obtained from stroke survivors due to motor paralysis and the subject of comparison is EMG amplitude. Here, focusing on the paretic side, we first propose a novel, joint torque-based normalization method that incorporates musculoskeletal modeling, forward dynamics simulation, and mathematical optimization. Next, upon method validation, we apply it to quantify changes in muscle tension and muscle synergy activation levels in STS motor control units for patients in subacute stroke rehabilitation. The novel method was validated against MVC-normalized EMG data from eight healthy participants, and it retained muscle activation amplitude differences for inter- and intra-subject comparisons. The proposed joint torque-based method was also compared with the common static optimization based on squared muscle activation and showed higher simulation accuracy overall. Serial STS measurements were conducted with four post-stroke patients during their subacute rehabilitation stay (137 ± 22 days) in the hospital. Quantitative results of patients suggest that maximum muscle tension and activation level of muscle synergy temporal patterns may reflect the effectiveness of subacute stroke rehabilitation. A quality comparison between muscle synergies computed with the conventional within-task peak/mean EMG normalization and our proposed method showed that the conventional was prone to activation amplitude overestimation and underestimation. The contributed method and findings help recapitulate and understand the post-stroke motor recovery process, which may facilitate developing more effective rehabilitation strategies for future stroke survivors.

Highlights

  • Every country in the world is experiencing a shift in the age distribution of its population toward older ages (United Nations, 2019)

  • Due to the multiple scopes of this research, we first evaluate muscle activation estimation results by the proposed normalization against results by traditional maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) normalization; we show the accuracy improvement of the proposed joint torque-based algorithm for musculoskeletal simulation compared to that of the most common static optimization (SO) based on squared muscle activation; following a quality comparison between muscle synergies computed with our proposed method and the conventional peak EMG normalization in previous studies, we demonstrate the methodological impact on synergy structures and longitudinal changes in muscle tension and muscle synergy during subacute stroke rehabilitation to address our ultimate goal to provide new perspectives and independent reference data for future research on stroke rehabilitation

  • This study proposed a novel method to compute post-stroke muscle activation based on joint torques

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Summary

Introduction

Every country in the world is experiencing a shift in the age distribution of its population toward older ages (United Nations, 2019). The prevalence of age-related chronic diseases such as stroke is anticipated to increase steeply as the global population rapidly ages (James et al, 2018). Stroke has been the worldwide leading cause of disability and mortality (World Health Organization, 2019). Post-stroke patients suffer from significant motor deficiency and diminished independence in performing fundamental sit-to-stand (STS) movement (Cheng et al, 1998), which is the starting point of daily life and a reflection on one’s quality of life. When transferring body momentum upwards from a sitting position, post-stroke patients are susceptible to falls, a well-known source of high injury severity and mortality (Cheng et al, 1998; Sterling et al, 2001). Repetitive and facilitated rehabilitation training on STS in addition to usual care can improve the patient’s motor abilities (de Sousa et al, 2019)

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