Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions

Abstract Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate transient bimanual effects on the force control capabilities of the paretic and non-paretic arms in individuals post stroke across submaximal and maximal force control tasks. Methods Fourteen chronic stroke patients (mean age = 63.8 ± 15....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hyun Joon Kim, Nyeonju Kang, James H. Cauraugh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-020-00693-3
id doaj-929865a9f70548ef844f2dafd959f93b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-929865a9f70548ef844f2dafd959f93b2020-11-25T03:16:21ZengBMCJournal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation1743-00032020-05-0117111110.1186/s12984-020-00693-3Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractionsHyun Joon Kim0Nyeonju Kang1James H. Cauraugh2Department of Human Movement Science, Incheon National UniversityNeuromechanical Rehabilitation Research Laboratory, Incheon National UniversityDepartment of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of FloridaAbstract Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate transient bimanual effects on the force control capabilities of the paretic and non-paretic arms in individuals post stroke across submaximal and maximal force control tasks. Methods Fourteen chronic stroke patients (mean age = 63.8 ± 15.9; stroke duration = 38.7 ± 45.2 months) completed two isometric force control tasks: (a) submaximal control and (b) maximal sustained force production. Participants executed both tasks with their wrist and fingers extending across unimanual (paretic and non-paretic arms) and bimanual conditions. Mean force, force variability using coefficient of variation, force regularity using sample entropy were calculated for each condition. Results During the submaximal force control tasks (i.e., 5, 25, and 50% of maximum voluntary contraction), the asymmetrical mean force between the paretic and non-paretic arms decreased from unimanual to bimanual conditions. The asymmetry of force variability and regularity between the two arms while executing unimanual force control tended to decrease in the bimanual condition because of greater increases in the force variability and regularity for the non-paretic arm than those for the paretic arm. During the maximal sustained force production tasks (i.e., 100% of maximum voluntary contraction), the paretic arm increased maximal forces and decreased force variability in the bimanual condition, whereas the non-paretic arm reduced maximal forces and elevated force variability from unimanual to bimanual conditions. Conclusions The current findings support a proposition that repetitive bimanual isometric training with higher execution intensity may facilitate progress toward stroke motor recovery.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-020-00693-3StrokeUnimanualBimanualIsometric force controlParetic arm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyun Joon Kim
Nyeonju Kang
James H. Cauraugh
spellingShingle Hyun Joon Kim
Nyeonju Kang
James H. Cauraugh
Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Stroke
Unimanual
Bimanual
Isometric force control
Paretic arm
author_facet Hyun Joon Kim
Nyeonju Kang
James H. Cauraugh
author_sort Hyun Joon Kim
title Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
title_short Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
title_full Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
title_fullStr Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
title_full_unstemmed Transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
title_sort transient changes in paretic and non-paretic isometric force control during bimanual submaximal and maximal contractions
publisher BMC
series Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
issn 1743-0003
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Abstract Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate transient bimanual effects on the force control capabilities of the paretic and non-paretic arms in individuals post stroke across submaximal and maximal force control tasks. Methods Fourteen chronic stroke patients (mean age = 63.8 ± 15.9; stroke duration = 38.7 ± 45.2 months) completed two isometric force control tasks: (a) submaximal control and (b) maximal sustained force production. Participants executed both tasks with their wrist and fingers extending across unimanual (paretic and non-paretic arms) and bimanual conditions. Mean force, force variability using coefficient of variation, force regularity using sample entropy were calculated for each condition. Results During the submaximal force control tasks (i.e., 5, 25, and 50% of maximum voluntary contraction), the asymmetrical mean force between the paretic and non-paretic arms decreased from unimanual to bimanual conditions. The asymmetry of force variability and regularity between the two arms while executing unimanual force control tended to decrease in the bimanual condition because of greater increases in the force variability and regularity for the non-paretic arm than those for the paretic arm. During the maximal sustained force production tasks (i.e., 100% of maximum voluntary contraction), the paretic arm increased maximal forces and decreased force variability in the bimanual condition, whereas the non-paretic arm reduced maximal forces and elevated force variability from unimanual to bimanual conditions. Conclusions The current findings support a proposition that repetitive bimanual isometric training with higher execution intensity may facilitate progress toward stroke motor recovery.
topic Stroke
Unimanual
Bimanual
Isometric force control
Paretic arm
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-020-00693-3
work_keys_str_mv AT hyunjoonkim transientchangesinpareticandnonpareticisometricforcecontrolduringbimanualsubmaximalandmaximalcontractions
AT nyeonjukang transientchangesinpareticandnonpareticisometricforcecontrolduringbimanualsubmaximalandmaximalcontractions
AT jameshcauraugh transientchangesinpareticandnonpareticisometricforcecontrolduringbimanualsubmaximalandmaximalcontractions
_version_ 1724636726472736768