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Toward modeling locomotion using electromyography-informed 3D models: application to cerebral palsy.

M SartoriJ W FernandezL ModeneseC P CartyL A BarberK OberhoferJ ZhangG G HandsfieldN S StottT F BesierD FarinaDavid G Lloyd
Published in: Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Systems biology and medicine (2016)
This position paper proposes a modeling pipeline to develop clinically relevant neuromusculoskeletal models to understand and treat complex neurological disorders. Although applicable to a variety of neurological conditions, we provide direct pipeline applicative examples in the context of cerebral palsy (CP). This paper highlights technologies in: (1) patient-specific segmental rigid body models developed from magnetic resonance imaging for use in inverse kinematics and inverse dynamics pipelines; (2) efficient population-based approaches to derive skeletal models and muscle origins/insertions that are useful for population statistics and consistent creation of continuum models; (3) continuum muscle descriptions to account for complex muscle architecture including spatially varying material properties with muscle wrapping; (4) muscle and tendon properties specific to CP; and (5) neural-based electromyography-informed methods for muscle force prediction. This represents a novel modeling pipeline that couples for the first time electromyography extracted features of disrupted neuromuscular behavior with advanced numerical methods for modeling CP-specific musculoskeletal morphology and function. The translation of such pipeline to the clinical level will provide a new class of biomarkers that objectively describe the neuromusculoskeletal determinants of pathological locomotion and complement current clinical assessment techniques, which often rely on subjective judgment. WIREs Syst Biol Med 2017, 9:e1368. doi: 10.1002/wsbm.1368 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website.
Keyphrases
  • cerebral palsy
  • skeletal muscle
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • physical activity
  • magnetic resonance
  • brain injury
  • diffusion weighted imaging
  • functional connectivity
  • high density