Biosensors (Jun 2019)

EMG-Based Characterization of Walking Asymmetry in Children with Mild Hemiplegic Cerebral Palsy

  • Francesco Di Nardo,
  • Annachiara Strazza,
  • Alessandro Mengarelli,
  • Stefano Cardarelli,
  • Andrea Tigrini,
  • Federica Verdini,
  • Alberto Nascimbeni,
  • Valentina Agostini,
  • Marco Knaflitz,
  • Sandro Fioretti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bios9030082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. 82

Abstract

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Hemiplegia is a neurological disorder that is often detected in children with cerebral palsy. Although many studies have investigated muscular activity in hemiplegic legs, few EMG-based findings focused on unaffected limb. This study aimed to quantify the asymmetric behavior of lower-limb-muscle recruitment during walking in mild-hemiplegic children from surface-EMG and foot-floor contact features. sEMG signals from tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius lateralis and foot-floor contact data during walking were analyzed in 16 hemiplegic children classified as W1 according to Winter’ scale, and in 100 control children. Statistical gait analysis, a methodology achieving a statistical characterization of gait by averaging surface-EMG-based features, was performed. Results, achieved in hundreds of strides for each child, indicated that in the hemiplegic side with respect to the non-hemiplegic side, W1 children showed a statistically significant: decreased number of strides with normal foot-floor contact; decreased stance-phase length and initial-contact sub-phase; curtailed, less frequent TA activity in terminal swing and a lack of TA activity at heel-strike. The acknowledged impairment of anti-phase eccentric control of dorsiflexors was confirmed in the hemiplegic side, but not in the contralateral side. However, a modified foot-floor contact pattern is evinced also in the contralateral side, probably to make up for balance requirements.

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