RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT04607174

Voluntary Activation During Isokinetic Contractions in Subjects with Neuromotor Disorders

Measuring Voluntary Activation of the Quadriceps Femoris During Isokinetic Concentric Contractions with the Interpolated Twitch Technique (ITT) in Subjects with Neuromotor Disorders


Sponsor

Istituto Auxologico Italiano

Enrollment

20 participants

Start Date

Oct 7, 2020

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Activation is the amount of voluntary recruitment of a muscle during voluntary contraction. Full activation implies the recruitment of all muscle fibres at their tetanic frequency. In healthy subjects, and even in sports performances, full activation may be rarely achieved despite a subjectively maximal effort. Highly decreased activation has been observed in patients affected by various orthopaedic and neurological disorders. In these subjects, paresis may be caused or aggravated by primitive impairments of the central nervous system and/or, by stimuli arising from peripheral damaged tissues that inhibit the corticospinal or the intraspinal recruitment of motoneurones ("arthrogenous muscle weakness"). There are numerous investigations in the literature on activation measured during isometric contractions, while they are substantially missing as far as isokinetic concentric contractions are concerned. There are reasons to suppose that, contrary to what has been demonstrated for healthy subjects, in patients with various motor impairments the activation is diminished the more, the higher is the joint rotation speed. The present study aims to investigate the amount of activation of the quadriceps femoris during subjectively maximal isometric contractions at 40° knee flexion (0°=complete extension) and isokinetic concentric contractions at an angular velocity of 100°/s in patients with various orthopaedic and neurologic conditions. Activation will be measured on an isokinetic dynamometer, through the "interpolated twitch technique". This consists of stimulating a representative sample of the muscle belly through an electric shock. If the shock does not generate an extra force during contraction, all muscle fibres belonging to the sample reached by the electric shock can be claimed to be recruited at their tetanic frequency. Otherwise, following the stimulus, a twitch can be observed revealing submaximal voluntary recruitment of the muscle.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 YearsMax Age: 70 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is examining how well people with neuromotor disorders (conditions affecting nerve and muscle control) can voluntarily activate their muscles during controlled knee exercises. It aims to better understand muscle function in conditions like stroke, multiple sclerosis, or spinal cord injury. **You may be eligible if...** - You are between 18 and 70 years old - You can bend and straighten your knee at least 70 degrees - You can understand the instructions and complete the movement task - You are able to sign an informed consent form **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You are pregnant - You have a history of epilepsy - You have significant cognitive impairment (low score on mental status exam) - You have an implanted electronic device (like a pacemaker) - You have orthopedic conditions limiting knee movement - You are on blood thinners (anticoagulant medication) - You have moderate to severe osteoporosis Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

OTHERPathologic group

Voluntary Activation level will be determined according to the interpolate twitch technique (ITT). During isometric contractions (knee at 40° flexion), three electric shocks (doublets) will be delivered. The first shock will be delivered at rest before contraction. The second one will be delivered 3-4 s after the beginning of the effort. The third one will be delivered at rest 2-3 s after the contraction has ended. Two isometric contractions will be performed, with a 3-minute break. Then, 3 consecutive continuous passive motion (CPM) extension-flexions of the knee joint (range 105-0°), and 3 isokinetic concentric contractions (ISOK) will be performed. During both CPM and ISOK an electric shock will be delivered during each repetition. The instant of stimulation will be determined in a way allowing the twitch moments to peak at exactly 40° of knee flexion during extension. The same procedure will be administered first to the affected limb, and then to the non-affected limb.


Locations(1)

Istituto Auxologico Italiano

Milan, MI, Italy

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NCT04607174


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