Frequency-Specific Modulation of Vestibular-Evoked Sway Responses in Humans

2010 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 1048-1056 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Dakin ◽  
Billy L. Luu ◽  
Kees van den Doel ◽  
John Timothy Inglis ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Blouin

Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) results in characteristic muscle and whole-body responses in humans maintaining standing balance. However, the relationship between these two vestibular-evoked responses remains elusive. This study seeks to determine whether mechanical filtering from conversion of lower-limb muscle activity to body sway, during standing balance, can be used to attenuate sway while maintaining biphasic lower-limb muscle responses using frequency-limited stochastic vestibular stimulation (SVS). We hypothesized that SVS deprived of frequencies <2 Hz would evoke biphasic muscle responses with minimal whole-body sway due to mechanical filtering of the higher-frequency muscle responses. Subjects were exposed to five stimulus bandwidths: two meant to induce sway responses (0–1 and 0–2 Hz) and three to dissociate vestibular-evoked muscle responses from whole-body sway (0–25, 1–25, and 2–25 Hz). Two main results emerged: 1) SVS-related sway was attenuated when frequencies <2 Hz were excluded, whereas multiphasic muscle and force responses were retained; and 2) the gain of the estimated transfer functions exhibited successive low-pass filtering of vestibular stimuli during conversion to muscle activity, anteroposterior (AP) moment, and sway. This successive low-pass filtering limited the transfer of signal power to frequencies <20 Hz in muscle activity, <5 Hz in AP moment, and <2 Hz in AP trunk sway. Consequently, the present results show that SVS delivered at frequencies >2 Hz to standing humans do not cause a destabilizing whole-body sway response but are associated with the typical biphasic lower-limb muscle responses.

2017 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 1070-1083 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine R. Lowrey ◽  
Joseph Y. Nashed ◽  
Stephen H. Scott

An important aspect of motor control is the ability to perform tasks with the upper limbs while maintaining whole body balance. However, little is known about the coordination of upper limb voluntary and whole body postural control after mechanical disturbances that require both upper limb motor corrections to attain a behavioral goal and lower limb motor responses to maintain whole body balance. The present study identified the temporal organization of muscle responses and center of pressure (COP) changes following mechanical perturbations during reaching. Our results demonstrate that muscle responses in the upper limb are evoked first (∼50 ms), with lower limb muscle activity occurring immediately after, in as little as ∼60 ms after perturbation. Hand motion was immediately altered by the load, while COP changes occurred after ∼100 ms, when lower limb muscle activity was already present. Our secondary findings showed that both muscle activity and COP changes were influenced by behavioral context (by altering target shape, circle vs. rectangle). Voluntary and postural actions initially directed the hand toward the center of both target types, but after the perturbation upper limb and postural responses redirected the hand toward different spatial locations along the rectangle. Muscle activity was increased for both upper and lower limbs when correcting to the circle vs. the rectangle, and these differences emerged as early as the long-latency epoch (∼75–120 ms). Our results demonstrate that postural responses are rapidly and flexibly altered to consider the behavioral goal of the upper limb. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The present work establishes that, when reaching to a target while standing, perturbations applied to the upper limb elicit a rapid response in lower limb muscles. Unlike voluntary movements, postural responses do not occur before corrections of the upper limb. We show the first evidence that corrective postural adjustments are modulated by upper limb behavioral context (target shape). Importantly, this indicates that postural responses take into account upper limb feedback for online control.


2017 ◽  
Vol 52 ◽  
pp. 55-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Lienhard ◽  
Jordyn Vienneau ◽  
Sandro Nigg ◽  
Bernd Friesenbichler ◽  
Benno M. Nigg

2015 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 2844-2853 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Lienhard ◽  
Jordyn Vienneau ◽  
Sandro Nigg ◽  
Olivier Meste ◽  
Serge S. Colson ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 102-108
Author(s):  
Adam I. Semciw ◽  
Viji N. Visvalingam ◽  
Charlotte Ganderton ◽  
Peter Lawrenson ◽  
Paul W. Hodges ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 50 ◽  
pp. 34-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Gross ◽  
F. Leboeuf ◽  
M. Lempereur ◽  
T. Michel ◽  
B. Perrouin-Verbe ◽  
...  

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