Impact of Experimental Tonic Pain on Corrective Motor Responses to Mechanical Perturbations

المؤلفون المشاركون

Traverse, Elodie
Brun, Clémentine
Harnois, Émilie
Mercier, Catherine

المصدر

Neural Plasticity

العدد

المجلد 2020، العدد 2020 (31 ديسمبر/كانون الأول 2020)، ص ص. 1-13، 13ص.

الناشر

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

تاريخ النشر

2020-07-31

دولة النشر

مصر

عدد الصفحات

13

التخصصات الرئيسية

الأحياء
الطب البشري

الملخص EN

Movement is altered by pain, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear.

Assessing corrective muscle responses following mechanical perturbations can help clarify these underlying mechanisms, as these responses involve spinal (short-latency response, 20-50 ms), transcortical (long-latency response, 50-100 ms), and cortical (early voluntary response, 100-150 ms) mechanisms.

Pairing mechanical (proprioceptive) perturbations with different conditions of visual feedback can also offer insight into how pain impacts on sensorimotor integration.

The general aim of this study was to examine the impact of experimental tonic pain on corrective muscle responses evoked by mechanical and/or visual perturbations in healthy adults.

Two sessions (Pain (induced with capsaicin) and No pain) were performed using a robotic exoskeleton combined with a 2D virtual environment.

Participants were instructed to maintain their index in a target despite the application of perturbations under four conditions of sensory feedback: (1) proprioceptive only, (2) visuoproprioceptive congruent, (3) visuoproprioceptive incongruent, and (4) visual only.

Perturbations were induced in either flexion or extension, with an amplitude of 2 or 3 Nm.

Surface electromyography was recorded from Biceps and Triceps muscles.

Results demonstrated no significant effect of the type of sensory feedback on corrective muscle responses, no matter whether pain was present or not.

When looking at the effect of pain on corrective responses across muscles, a significant interaction was found, but for the early voluntary responses only.

These results suggest that the effect of cutaneous tonic pain on motor control arises mainly at the cortical (rather than spinal) level and that proprioception dominates vision for responses to perturbations, even in the presence of pain.

The observation of a muscle-specific modulation using a cutaneous pain model highlights the fact that the impacts of pain on the motor system are not only driven by the need to unload structures from which the nociceptive signal is arising.

نمط استشهاد جمعية علماء النفس الأمريكية (APA)

Traverse, Elodie& Brun, Clémentine& Harnois, Émilie& Mercier, Catherine. 2020. Impact of Experimental Tonic Pain on Corrective Motor Responses to Mechanical Perturbations. Neural Plasticity،Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1203007

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الأمريكية للغات الحديثة (MLA)

Traverse, Elodie…[et al.]. Impact of Experimental Tonic Pain on Corrective Motor Responses to Mechanical Perturbations. Neural Plasticity No. 2020 (2020), pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1203007

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الطبية الأمريكية (AMA)

Traverse, Elodie& Brun, Clémentine& Harnois, Émilie& Mercier, Catherine. Impact of Experimental Tonic Pain on Corrective Motor Responses to Mechanical Perturbations. Neural Plasticity. 2020. Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1203007

نوع البيانات

مقالات

لغة النص

الإنجليزية

الملاحظات

Includes bibliographical references

رقم السجل

BIM-1203007