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Intermuscular Coherence during Quiet Standing in Sub-Acute Patients after Stroke: An Exploratory Study.

Eiji YamanakaRyosuke GotoMichiyuki KawakamiTakaki TateishiKunitsugu KondoIppei Nojima
Published in: Brain sciences (2023)
Asymmetrically impaired standing control is a prevalent disability among stroke patients; however, most of the neuromuscular characteristics are unclear. Therefore, the main purpose of this study was to investigate between-limb differences in intermuscular coherence during quiet standing. Consequently, 15 patients who had sub-acute stroke performed a quiet standing task without assistive devices, and electromyography was measured on the bilateral tibialis anterior (TA), soleus (SL), and medial gastrocnemius (MG). The intermuscular coherence of the unilateral synergistic (SL-MG) pair and unilateral antagonist (TA-SL and TA-MG) pairs in the delta (0-5 Hz) and beta (15-35 Hz) bands were calculated and compared between the paretic and non-paretic limbs. The unilateral synergistic SL-MG coherence in the beta band was significantly greater in the non-paretic limb than in the paretic limb ( p = 0.017), while unilateral antagonist TA-MG coherence in the delta band was significantly greater in the paretic limb than in the non-paretic limb ( p < 0.01). During quiet standing, stroke patients showed asymmetry in the cortical control of the plantar flexor muscles, and synchronous control between the antagonistic muscles was characteristic of the paretic limb. This study identified abnormal muscle activity patterns and asymmetrical cortical control underlying impaired standing balance in patients with sub-acute stroke using an intermuscular coherence analysis.
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