PROPRIOCEPTION, STRENGTH AND STANDING
Multiple Paper Presentation
Stephen Lord
Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute
Annie
Butler
Richard Fitzpatrick
Abstract ID Number: 123 Last modified:
June 1, 2007
Presentation date: 07/07/2007 2:00 PM in Quad General Lecture Theatre
(View Schedule)
Abstract
Introduction: Poor standing balance in weak people may be due to poor proprioceptive input in addition to muscle weakness. We investigated how the mass of an upright body and the available muscle strength affects our ability to balance a load.
Methods: In one study, healthy young subjects (n=12) balanced three different inverted pendula: (i)a small pendulum aligned with the elbow joint, balanced by the elbow flexors, (ii)a large body-sized pendulum aligned with the ankle joint, balanced by the calf muscles, and (iii) the subject’s own body that was balanced around the ankles by standing. Each was tested with different masses, either added to the mechanical pendula or strapped to the body during standing. Sway was measured from the angular movement of the pendula around the axis of rotation during 40s periods using optical sensors, with the eyes shut and open. Root mean square values of sway amplitude and power spectra for each condition were compared.
In a second study, we compared sway (measured with a custom designed sway meter) with eyes open and eyes closed in (i) 17 women with prior-polio and lower-limb weakness and 34 age-matched controls, and (ii) 450 elderly women classified as weak (<60N dorsiflexion force, n=203) or strong (>60N, n=247).
Results: In young subjects, increased load resulted in increased sway but
disproportionately so without vision. As the load increased, sway with open eyes increased linearly. However with eyes closed, sway increased exponentially. That is, subjects relied more and more on vision to stabilise the larger loads. For example, eye closure increased body pendulum sway by 337% for a 1-body load, and at 2 bodies it increased body sway by 9115% (P<0.05). Clinical corroborations of these data were shown in prior-polio and weak elderly women. The women aged 60-69 years swayed no more than their stronger counterparts with their eyes open. However, these weaker subjects had a disproportional increase in sway with eye closure.
Conclusion: We depend more on vision to stabilise balanced loads as their size increases relative to the available muscle strength. The strength of the person and the load they are carrying do not change with the eyes closed. Thus, we propose that proprioceptive control of balance fails with larger loads.
To be Presented at the Following Symposium:
Multisensory mechanisms of posture control
Other papers in this Symposium: - Brian Day
MRC Human Movement Group, Sobell Department for Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, UCL, London Michel Guerraz Laboratoire de Psychologie et Neurocognition CNRS UMR 5105 Université de Savoie, France. Feedforward versus feedback modulation of human vestibular-evoked balance responses by visual self-motion information - Richard Fitzpatrick
Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Daina Sturnieks Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Rebecca St George Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Daniel Wardman Vestibular-visual interactions in balance and orientation - Rebecca St George
Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Richard Fitzpatrick Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Perceptions of orientation after vestibular, visual and proprioceptive conditioning - Ian Curthoys
Psychology, University of Sydney Hamish
MacDougall
Psychology, University of Sydney
Dena
Attalla
Psychology, University of Sydney
Fabienne
MBongo
LNRS, Universite Paris
Pierre-Paul
Vidal
LNRS, Universite Paris
Catherine de Waele LNRS, Universite Paris Human head and body stability after unilateral vestibular loss
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