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Dynamics and stability of muscle activations during walking in healthy young and older adults
Authors:Hyun Gu Kang  Jonathan B. Dingwell
Affiliation:aInstitute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife, Boston, MA 02131, United States;bGerontology Division, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA 02215, United States;cHarvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, United States;dDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, United States;eDepartment of Kinesiology & Health Education, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712, United States
Abstract:To facilitate stable walking, humans must generate appropriate motor patterns and effective corrective responses to perturbations. Yet most EMG analyses do not address the continuous nature of muscle activation dynamics over multiple strides. We compared muscle activation dynamics in young and older adults by defining a multivariate state space for muscle activity. Eighteen healthy older and 17 younger adults walked on a treadmill for 2 trials of 5 min each at each of 5 controlled speeds (80–120% of preferred). EMG linear envelopes of v. lateralis, b. femoris, gastrocnemius, and t. anterior of the left leg were obtained. Interstride variability, local dynamic stability (divergence exponents), and orbital stability (maximum Floquet multipliers; FM) were calculated. Both age groups exhibited similar preferred walking speeds (p=0.86). Amplitudes and variability of individual EMG linear envelopes increased with speed (p<0.01) in all muscles but gastrocnemius. Older adults also exhibited greater variability in b. femoris and t. anterior (p<0.004). When comparing continuous multivariate EMG dynamics, older adults demonstrated greater local and orbital instability of their EMG patterns (p<0.01). We also compared how muscle activation dynamics were manifested in kinematics. Local divergence exponents were strongly correlated between kinematics and EMG, independent of age and walking speed, while variability and max FM were not. These changes in EMG dynamics may be related to increased neuromotor noise associated with aging and may indicate subtle deterioration of gait function that could lead to future functional declines.
Keywords:EMG   Aging   Gait   Stability   Speed
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