Abstract

BackgroundThe above-knee amputation of a lower limb is a severe impairment that affects significantly the ability to walk; considering this, a complex adaptation strategy at the neuromuscular level is needed in order to be able to move safely with a prosthetic knee. In literature, it has been demonstrated that muscle activity during walking can be described via the activation of a small set of muscle synergies. The analysis of the composition and the time activation profiles of such synergies have been found to be a valid tool for the description of the motor control schemes in pathological subjects.MethodsIn this study, we used muscle synergy analysis techniques to characterize the differences in the modular motor control schemes between a population of 14 people with trans-femoral amputation and 12 healthy subjects walking at two different (slow and normal self-selected) speeds. Muscle synergies were extracted from a 12 lower-limb muscles sEMG recording via non-negative matrix factorization. Equivalence of the synergy vectors was quantified by a cross-validation procedure, while differences in terms of time activation coefficients were evaluated through the analysis of the activity in the different gait sub-phases.ResultsFour synergies were able to reconstruct the muscle activity in all subjects. The spatial component of the synergy vectors did not change in all the analysed populations, while differences were present in the activity during the sound limb’s stance phase. Main features of people with trans-femoral amputation’s muscle synergy recruitment are a prolonged activation of the module composed of calf muscles and an additional activity of the hamstrings’ module before and after the prosthetic heel strike.ConclusionsSynergy-based results highlight how, although the complexity and the spatial organization of motor control schemes are the same found in healthy subjects, substantial differences are present in the synergies’ recruitment of people with trans femoral amputation. In particular, the most critical task during the gait cycle is the weight transfer from the sound limb to the prosthetic one. Future studies will integrate these results with the dynamics of movement, aiming to a complete neuro-mechanical characterization of people with trans-femoral amputation’s walking strategies that can be used to improve the rehabilitation therapies.

Highlights

  • The above knee amputation is a severely invasive surgery that may be needed as a consequence of various causes such as vascular diseases, trauma or cancer [1]

  • In this kind of patients movement kinematics has been analysed in detail before [5], while surface electromyography has been used to assess changes in muscle activation only in a small set of studies dealing with gait and stair ascending [6, 7]; in addition, a complete characterization of the coordination of lower limb muscles in people with trans-femoral amputation is still missing

  • Number and structure of synergies The mean number of synergies able to reconstruct the activation of each population is higher than 3 for each of the three groups; considering this, 4 synergies were extracted from each subject as the minimum number able to reconstruct the muscle activity in approximately the 90% of the subjects

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Summary

Introduction

The above knee amputation is a severely invasive surgery that may be needed as a consequence of various causes such as vascular diseases, trauma or cancer [1]. A correct understanding of the strategies with which the CNS controls the musculoskeletal system in prosthetic gait can help with the design of advanced prosthetic devices and more efficient rehabilitation techniques In this kind of patients movement kinematics has been analysed in detail before [5], while surface electromyography (sEMG) has been used to assess changes in muscle activation only in a small set of studies dealing with gait and stair ascending [6, 7]; in addition, a complete characterization of the coordination of lower limb muscles in people with trans-femoral amputation is still missing. The analysis of the composition and the time activation profiles of such synergies have been found to be a valid tool for the description of the motor control schemes in pathological subjects

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