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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 4 October 2000, pp. 1949-1960
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Departamento de Fisiologia e Biofísica, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Cidade Universitaria Zeferino Vaz., CEP 13.081-970 Campinas, SP Brazil; 2School of Kinesiology (M/C 194) and 3Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago 60680; 4Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush Medical College, Chicago 60612; and 5College of Health and Human Development Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago (MC 898), Chicago, Illinois 60612-7251
Almeida, Gil Lúcio,
Daniel M. Corcos, and
Ziaul Hasan.
Horizontal-Plane Arm Movements With Direction
Reversals Performed by Normal Individuals and Individuals With
Down Syndrome. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 1949-1960, 2000. We
examined the systematic variation in shoulder and elbow torque, as well
as movement kinematics, for horizontal-plane arm movements with
direction reversals performed by normal individuals and individuals
with Down syndrome. Eight neurologically normal individuals and eight
individuals with Down syndrome performed horizontal, planar reversal
movements to four different target locations. The four locations of the
targets were chosen such that there is a systematic increase in elbow
interaction torque for each of the four different target locations.
This systematic increase in interaction torque has previously been
shown to lead to progressively larger movement reversal errors, and
trajectories that do not show a sharp reversal of direction, for
movements to and from the target in patients who have proprioceptive
abnormalities. We computed joint torques at the elbow and shoulder and
found a high correlation between elbow and shoulder torque for the
neurologically normal subjects. The ratio of joint torques varied
systematically with target location. These findings extend previously
reported findings of a linear synergy between shoulder and elbow joints for a variety of point-to-point movements. There was also a correlation between elbow and shoulder torque in individuals with Down syndrome, but the magnitude of the correlation was less. The ratio of joint torques changed systematically with target direction in individuals with Down syndrome but was slightly different from the ratio observed for neurologically normal individuals. The difference in the ratio was
caused by the generation of proportionately more elbow torque than
shoulder torque. The fingertip path of individuals with Down syndrome
showed a sharp reversal in moving toward and then away from the target.
In this respect, they were similar to neurologically normal individuals
but dissimilar to individuals with proprioceptive deficits. Finally, we
observed that individuals with Down syndrome spend proportionately more
time in the vicinity of the target than normal individuals.
Collectively these results show that there is a systematic relationship
between joint torques at the elbow and shoulder. This relationship is
present for reversal movements and is also present in individuals with
Down syndrome.
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