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Assessing Brain–Muscle Connectivity in Human Locomotion through Mobile Brain/Body Imaging: Opportunities Pitfalls and Future Directions

机译:通过移动大脑/身体成像评估人类运动中的脑-肌肉连接性:机会陷阱和未来方向

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摘要

Assessment of the cortical role during bipedalism has been a methodological challenge. While surface electroencephalography (EEG) is capable of non-invasively measuring cortical activity during human locomotion, it is associated with movement artifacts obscuring cerebral sources of activity. Recently, statistical methods based on blind source separation revealed potential for resolving this issue, by segregating non-cerebral/artifactual from cerebral sources of activity. This step marked a new opportunity for the investigation of the brains’ role while moving and was tagged mobile brain/body imaging (MoBI). This methodology involves simultaneous mobile recording of brain activity with several other body behavioral variables (e.g., muscle activity and kinematics), through wireless recording wearable devices/sensors. Notably, several MoBI studies using EEG–EMG approaches recently showed that the brain is functionally connected to the muscles and active throughout the whole gait cycle and, thus, rejecting the long-lasting idea of a solely spinal-driven bipedalism. However, MoBI and brain/muscle connectivity assessments during human locomotion are still in their fledgling state of investigation. Mobile brain/body imaging approaches hint toward promising opportunities; however, there are some remaining pitfalls that need to be resolved before considering their routine clinical use. This article discusses several of these pitfalls and proposes research to address them. Examples relate to the validity, reliability, and reproducibility of this method in ecologically valid scenarios and in different populations. Furthermore, whether brain/muscle connectivity within the MoBI framework represents a potential biomarker in neuromuscular syndromes where gait disturbances are evident (e.g., age-related sarcopenia) remains to be determined.
机译:对两足动物在皮层中的作用进行评估一直是方法学上的挑战。虽然表面脑电图(EEG)能够在人类运动期间无创地测量皮质活动,但它与遮盖大脑活动来源的运动伪影有关。最近,基于盲源分离的统计方法揭示了通过将非大脑/人工器官与大脑活动源分开来解决此问题的潜力。此步骤为研究大脑在移动过程中的作用提供了新的机会,并被标记为移动大脑/身体成像(MoBI)。这种方法涉及通过无线记录可穿戴设备/传感器同时移动记录大脑活动以及其他几个身体行为变量(例如,肌肉活动和运动学)。值得注意的是,最近使用EEG-EMG方法进行的几项MoBI研究表明,大脑在整个步态周期中均与肌肉功能连接并活跃,因此拒绝了由脊柱驱动的两足动物这一长久的想法。但是,MoBI和人类运动期间的大脑/肌肉连接性评估仍处于起步阶段。移动大脑/身体成像方法暗示了有希望的机会;但是,在考虑将其常规临床应用之前,还需要解决一些剩余的陷阱。本文讨论了其中的几个陷阱,并提出了解决这些陷阱的研究。实例涉及该方法在生态有效场景和不同人群中的有效性,可靠性和可重复性。此外,MoBI框架内的大脑/肌肉连接性是否代表步态障碍明显(例如,与年龄相关的肌肉减少症)的神经肌肉综合症的潜在生物标志物,尚待确定。

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