Publication
Corticomotor Excitability of Arm Muscles Modulates According to Static Position and Orientation of the Upper Limb
AbstractOBJECTIVE: We investigated how multi-joint changes in upper limb posture impact the corticomotor excitability of the posterior deltoid (PD) and biceps brachii (BIC), and evaluated whether postural variations in excitability related directly to changes in target muscle length. METHODS: The amplitude of individual motor evoked potentials (MEPs) was evaluated in each of thirteen different static postures. Four functional postures were investigated that varied in shoulder and elbow angle, while the forearm was positioned in each of three orientations. Posture-related changes in muscle lengths were assessed using a biomechanical arm model. Additionally, M-waves were evoked in the BIC in each of three forearm orientations to assess the impact of posture on recorded signal characteristics. RESULTS: BIC-MEP amplitudes were altered by shoulder and elbow posture, and demonstrated robust changes according to forearm orientation. Observed changes in BIC-MEP amplitudes exceeded those of the M-waves. PD-MEP amplitudes changed predominantly with shoulder posture, but were not completely independent of influence from forearm orientation. CONCLUSIONS: Results provide evidence that overall corticomotor excitability can be modulated according to multi-joint upper limb posture. SIGNIFICANCE: The ability to alter motor pathway excitability using static limb posture suggests the importance of posture selection during rehabilitation aimed at retraining individual muscle recruitment and/or overall coordination patterns.
Download publicationRelated Resources
See what’s new.
2011
High-Precision Surface Reconstruction of Human Bones from Point-Sampled DataWe present our efforts to build a database of high quality,…
2020
PointMask: Towards Interpretable and Bias-Resilient Point Cloud ProcessingDeep classifiers tend to associate a few discriminative input…
2014
Special Issue: Simulation for Architecture and Urban DesignThis special issue celebrates five annual SimAUD (Simulation for…
2010
Toward a Unified Representation System of Performance-Related DataAn environmentally-responsible building is not a fixed ideal but a…
Get in touch
Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.
Contact us