IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering (Jan 2024)

Identification of Neural and Non-Neural Origins of Joint Hyper-Resistance Based on a Novel Neuromechanical Model

  • Jente Willaert,
  • Kaat Desloovere,
  • Anja Van Campenhout,
  • Lena H. Ting,
  • Friedl De Groote

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2024.3381739
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32
pp. 1435 – 1444

Abstract

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Joint hyper-resistance is a common symptom in neurological disorders. It has both neural and non-neural origins, but it has been challenging to distinguish different origins based on clinical tests alone. Combining instrumented tests with parameter identification based on a neuromechanical model may allow us to dissociate the different origins of joint hyper-resistance in individual patients. However, this requires that the model captures the underlying mechanisms. Here, we propose a neuromechanical model that, in contrast to previously proposed models, accounts for muscle short-range stiffness (SRS) and its interaction with muscle tone and reflex activity. We collected knee angle trajectories during the pendulum test in 15 children with cerebral palsy (CP) and 5 typically developing children. We did the test in two conditions – hold and pre-movement – that have been shown to alter knee movement. We modeled the lower leg as an inverted pendulum actuated by two antagonistic Hill-type muscles extended with SRS. Reflex activity was modeled as delayed, linear feedback from muscle force. We estimated neural and non-neural parameters by optimizing the fit between simulated and measured knee angle trajectories during the hold condition. The model could fit a wide range of knee angle trajectories in the hold condition. The model with personalized parameters predicted the effect of pre-movement demonstrating that the model captured the underlying mechanism and subject-specific deficits. Our model may help with the identification of neural and non-neural origins of joint hyper-resistance and thereby opens perspectives for improved diagnosis and treatment selection in children with spastic CP, but such applications require further studies to establish the method’s reliability.

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