Abstract

BackgroundNeuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is extensively used in stroke motor rehabilitation. How it promotes motor recovery remains only partially understood. NMES could change muscular properties, produce altered sensory inputs, and modulate fluctuations of cortical activities; but the potential contribution from cortico-muscular couplings during NMES synchronized with dynamic movement has rarely been discussed.MethodWe investigated cortico-muscular interactions during passive, active, and NMES rhythmic pedaling in healthy subjects and chronic stroke survivors. EEG (128 channels), EMG (4 unilateral lower limb muscles) and movement parameters were measured during 3 sessions of constant-speed pedaling. Sensory-level NMES (20 mA) was applied to the muscles, and cyclic stimulation patterns were synchronized with the EMG during pedaling cycles. Adaptive mixture independent component analysis was utilized to determine the movement-related electro-cortical sources and the source dipole clusters. A directed cortico-muscular coupling analysis was conducted between representative source clusters and the EMGs using generalized partial directed coherence (GPDC). The bidirectional GPDC was compared across muscles and pedaling sessions for post-stroke and healthy subjects.ResultsDirected cortico-muscular coupling of NMES cycling was more similar to that of active pedaling than to that of passive pedaling for the tested muscles. For healthy subjects, sensory-level NMES could modulate GPDC of both ascending and descending pathways. Whereas for stroke survivors, NMES could modulate GPDC of only the ascending pathways.ConclusionsBy clarifying how NMES influences neuromuscular control during pedaling in healthy and post-stroke subjects, our results indicate the potential limitation of sensory-level NMES in promoting sensorimotor recovery in chronic stroke survivors.

Highlights

  • Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is extensively used in stroke motor rehabilitation

  • By clarifying how NMES influences neuromuscular control during pedaling in healthy and post-stroke subjects, our results indicate the potential limitation of sensory-level NMES in promoting sensorimotor recovery in chronic stroke survivors

  • Post-hoc t-test reported significant torque difference between active and passive pedaling, active and NMES pedaling for both stroke and healthy subjects, whereas no significant difference was Cluster centroid location

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Summary

Introduction

Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is extensively used in stroke motor rehabilitation. Bao et al Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation (2019) 16:143 and to induce peripheral limb movement by modulating neuron hyperpolarization or depolarization [4]. For stroke survivors, their spinal motor neurons are intact and excitable despite cortical impairments. NMES has been applied in lower limb rhythmic gait training for hemiplegic patients [8] It is challenging for stroke patients with severe motor impairments to support themselves, maintain balance, and walk coordinately. It was demonstrated that NMES pedaling enhanced lower limb motor functions for stroke patients, and improved muscle activation and symmetrical involvement [10, 11]

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