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  4. Investigation of neural and biomechanical impairments leading to pathological toe and heel gaits using neuromusculoskeletal modelling
 
research article

Investigation of neural and biomechanical impairments leading to pathological toe and heel gaits using neuromusculoskeletal modelling

Bruel, Alice  
•
Ben Ghorbel, Salim
•
Di Russo, Andrea  
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May 6, 2022
Journal Of Physiology-London

This study investigates the pathological toe and heel gaits seen in human locomotion using neuromusculoskeletal modelling and simulation. In particular, it aims to investigate potential cause-effect relationships between biomechanical or neural impairments and pathological gaits. Toe and heel gaits are commonly present in spinal cord injury, stroke and cerebral palsy. Toe walking is mainly attributed to spasticity and contracture at plantar flexor muscles, whereas heel walking can be attributed to muscle weakness of biomechanical or neural origin. To investigate the effect of these impairments on gait, this study focuses on the soleus and gastrocnemius muscles as they contribute to ankle plantarflexion. We built a reflex circuit model based on previous work by Geyer and Herr with additional pathways affecting the plantar flexor muscles. The SCONE software, which provides optimisation tools for 2D neuromechanical simulation of human locomotion, is used to optimise the corresponding reflex parameters and simulate healthy gait. We then modelled various bilateral plantar flexor biomechanical and neural impairments, and individually introduced them in the healthy model. We characterised the resulting simulated gaits as pathological or not by comparing ankle kinematics and ankle moment with the healthy optimised gait based on metrics used in clinical studies. Our simulations suggest that toe walking can be generated by hyperreflexia, whereas muscle and neural weaknesses partially induce heel gait. Thus, this 'what if' approach is deemed of great interest as it allows investigation of the effect of various impairments on gait and suggests an important contribution of active reflex mechanisms to pathological toe gait. Key points Pathological toe and heel gaits are commonly present in various conditions such as spinal cord injury, stroke and cerebral palsy. These conditions present various neural and biomechanical impairments, but the cause-effect relationships between these impairments and pathological gaits are difficult to establish clinically. Based on neuromechanical simulation, this study focuses on the plantar flexor muscles and builds a new reflex circuit controller to model and evaluate the potential effect of both neural and biomechanical impairments on gait. Our results suggest an important contribution of active reflex mechanisms to pathological toe gait. This 'what if' based on neuromechanical modelling is thus deemed of great interest to target potential causes of pathological gait.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1113/JP282609
Web of Science ID

WOS:000791482100001

Author(s)
Bruel, Alice  
Ben Ghorbel, Salim
Di Russo, Andrea  
Stanev, Dimitar  
Armand, Stephane
Courtine, Gregoire  
Ijspeert, Auke  
Date Issued

2022-05-06

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Journal Of Physiology-London
Subjects

Neurosciences

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Physiology

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Neurosciences & Neurology

•

Physiology

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heel walking

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locomotion

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neuromusculoskeletal modelling

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pathological gait

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spasticity

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toe walking

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weakness

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spinal-cord-injury

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presynaptic inhibition

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muscle weakness

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cerebral-palsy

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musculoskeletal simulation

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reciprocal facilitation

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ankle extensors

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reflex function

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soleus muscle

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spastic gait

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BIOROB  
Available on Infoscience
May 23, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/187981
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