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Título

Effect of posture and body weight loading on spinal posterior root reflex responses

AutorMegía-García, Á.; Serrano-Muñoz, D.; Comino-Suárez, Natalia CSIC; Ama, Antonio J. del CSIC ORCID; Moreno, Juan Camilo CSIC ORCID ; Gil-Agudo, Ángel; Taylor, Julian S. CSIC ORCID; Gómez-Soriano, Julio
Palabras clavebody weight support, neuromodulation, posterior root muscle reflex, spinal stimulation,stimulation threshold, transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation
Fecha de publicación2021
EditorBlackwell Publishing
CitaciónEuropean Journal of Neuroscience 54: 6575- 6586 (2021)
ResumenAbstract. The posterior root muscle response (PRM) is a monosynaptic reflex that is evoked by single pulse transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS). The main aim of this work was to analyse how body weight loading influences PRM reflex threshold measured from several lower limb muscles in healthy participants. PRM reflex responses were evoked with 1-ms rectangular monophasic pulses applied at an interval of 6 s via a self-adhesive electrode (9 × 5 cm) at the T11–T12 vertebral level. Surface electromyographic activity of lower limb muscles was recorded during four different conditions, one in decubitus supine (DS) and the other three involving standing at 100%, 50%, and 0% body weight loading (BW). PRM threshold intensity, peak-to-peak amplitude, and latency for each muscle were analysed in different conditions study. PRM reflex threshold increased with body weight unloading compared with DS, and the largest change was observed between DS and 0% BW for the proximal muscles and between DS and 50% BW for distal muscles. Peak-to-peak amplitude analysis showed only a significant mean decrease of 34.6% (SD 10.4, p = 0.028) in TA and 53.6% (SD 15.1, p = 0.019) in GM muscles between DS and 50% BW. No significant differences were observed for PRM latency. This study has shown that sensorimotor networks can be activated with tSCS in various conditions of body weight unloading. Higher stimulus intensities are necessary to evoke reflex response during standing at 50% body weight loading. These results have practical implications for gait rehabilitation training programmes that include body weight support.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ejn.15448
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/258295
DOI10.1111/ejn.15448
Identificadoresdoi: 10.1111/ejn.15448
issn: 1460-9568
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