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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 2 February 2001, pp. 759-769
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Movement Science Program, 2Program in Physical Therapy, and 3Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63108
Earhart, Gammon M. and
Amy J. Bastian.
Selection and Coordination of Human Locomotor Forms Following
Cerebellar Damage. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 759-769, 2001. We have previously shown that control
subjects use two distinct temporal strategies when stepping on an
inclined surface during walking: one for level and 10° surfaces and
another for 20 and 30° surfaces. These two temporal strategies were
characterized by systematic shifts in the timing of muscle activity and
peak joint angles. We examined whether cerebellar subjects with mild to
moderate gait ataxia were impaired in their ability to select these two
temporal strategies, adjust peak joint angle amplitudes, and/or adjust
one joint appropriately with respect to movements and constraints at
another joint. Subjects walked on a level surface and on different
wedges (10, 20, and 30°) presented in the context of level walking.
In a single trial, a subject walked on a level surface in approach to a
wedge, took a single step on the wedge, and continued walking on an
elevated level surface beyond the wedge. Cerebellar subjects used two
temporal strategies, one for the level and 10° surfaces and another
for 20 and 30° surfaces. Cerebellar strategies were similar to those
used by controls except for the timing of ankle-joint movement on the
steeper wedges. Cerebellar subjects adjusted the peak amplitudes of
individual joint angles normally, with the exception of peak ankle
plantarflexion. However, they exhibited greater trial-to-trial
variability of peak hip and knee joint angles that increased as a
function of wedge inclination. The most substantial deficit noted in
the cerebellar group was in the relative movement of multiple joints.
Cerebellar subjects demonstrated multijoint coordination deficits in
all conditions, although these deficits were most pronounced during stance on the steeper wedges. On the 30° wedge, cerebellar subjects showed abnormal relative movement of hip, knee, and ankle joints and
the most substantial decomposition of movement. We speculate that to
simplify multijoint control, cerebellar subjects decomposed their
movement by fixing the ankle joint in a dorsiflexed position on the
steepest wedges. Our results suggest that the cerebellum may not be
critical in selecting the basic motor patterns for the two temporal
strategies because cerebellar subjects produced appropriate timing
shifts at most joints. Instead, our data suggest that the cerebellum is
most critical for adjusting the relative movement of multiple joints,
especially to accommodate external constraints.
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