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Comparative Study
. 2003 Sep;114(9):1646-55.
doi: 10.1016/s1388-2457(03)00164-0.

The effects of stroke and age on finger interaction in multi-finger force production tasks

Affiliations
Comparative Study

The effects of stroke and age on finger interaction in multi-finger force production tasks

Sheng Li et al. Clin Neurophysiol. 2003 Sep.

Abstract

Objective: The main purpose of this study was to investigate changes in finger interaction after stroke with strongly unilateral motor effects. Effects of age on finger interaction were also analyzed.

Methods: Sixteen stroke subjects and 16 control subjects produced maximal voluntary contractions with different finger combinations by one hand and by two hands simultaneously. Individual finger forces were measured. In multi-finger tasks, force deficit (FD) was quantified as the difference between the peak finger forces in single-finger tasks and in multi-finger tasks, while enslaving (ENSL) was quantified as forces produced by fingers that were not required to produce force.

Results: In stroke subjects, the peak forces produced by the fingers of the impaired hand (IH) were about 36% less than those produced by the unimpaired hand. Stroke resulted in higher ENSL and decreased FD in the IH, particularly when the index and middle fingers produced force together, while aging led to higher FD and no change in ENSL. Two-hand tasks were accompanied by an additional drop in the force of individual fingers, i.e. bilateral deficit (BD). No changes in BD were observed with age or after stroke.

Conclusions: We conclude that IH function in persons after stroke is accompanied not only by a general loss of finger force but also by changes in indices of multi-finger interaction. The contrast between the significantly changed indices of one-hand multi-finger interaction and unchanged BD implies that cortical neurons mediating interhemispheric inhibition are relatively spared in unilateral stroke.

Significance: The study shows that stroke leads to changes not only in finger force but also in finger interaction. The conclusion on relatively spared interhemispheric projections is potentially important for therapy of hand function in stroke survivors.

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