Question We wondered whether an unconventional intervention, the Cross-Training, could improve the performance of dorsiflexor muscles in an inveterate iatrogenic drop-foot. We investigated whether unilateral, maximal isokinetic training of the normal leg would induce, in the contralateral affected side, a worthy strengthtransfer, with cortico-spinal and gait adaptations. Methods A 59-year-old man who suffered in childhood a surgical-induced damage of the left common peroneal nerve at the head of the fibula, performed a 4-week training (16 sessions) of the normal leg, at 40°/sangular velocity. Before and after training, the subject underwent a test-retest assessment procedure including: 1) bilateral isokinetic dynamometry of the dorsiflexors’ performance; 2) stance and gait-analysis; 3) recording of cortical and spinal drives to the affected leg, through measurement of central motor conduction time, input-output curve, cortical silent period (cSP), SICI, ICF, SICF, H-reflex, V-wave and Mwave. Results The untrained-affected dorsiflexors showed considerable increases in strength (peak-torque: pre=23N/m; post=31N/m), power (pre=14W; post=22W) and total-work (pre=9J; post=22J). Ankle dorsiflexion increased from 4 to 11 degrees. Overall gait pattern was unchanged, however a better stance performance was suggested by changes in heel-to-forefoot contact-time % of stance-time (pre=0.5%; post=3.4%) and mean step-length (pre=30cm; post=34cm). An increase in cortico-spinal drive to the untrained-affected leg was revealed only by reduction of cSP duration (120%RMT: pre=154ms; post=144ms; 150%RMT: pre=196ms; post=182ms). Conclusions Maximal isokinetic cross-training induced considerable improvements in the performance of the untrainedaffected leg with a parallel increase in its cortico-spinal drive. In this report cross-training was a viable and effective rehabilitative approach to drop-foot.

Does Cross-Training balance strength asymmetry in healthy subjects? A proof-of-concept trial / Manca, A.; Ortu, E.; Ginatempo, F.; Pisanu, F.; Tolu, E.; Deriu, Franca. - In: CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 1388-2457. - 125:Supplement 1(2014), pp. 111-112. (Intervento presentato al convegno 30th International Congress of Clinical Neurophysiology (ICCN) of the IFCN tenutosi a Berlino nel 20-23 marzo 2014) [10.1016/S1388-2457(14)50366-5].

Does Cross-Training balance strength asymmetry in healthy subjects? A proof-of-concept trial

A. Manca;F. Ginatempo;DERIU, Franca
2014-01-01

Abstract

Question We wondered whether an unconventional intervention, the Cross-Training, could improve the performance of dorsiflexor muscles in an inveterate iatrogenic drop-foot. We investigated whether unilateral, maximal isokinetic training of the normal leg would induce, in the contralateral affected side, a worthy strengthtransfer, with cortico-spinal and gait adaptations. Methods A 59-year-old man who suffered in childhood a surgical-induced damage of the left common peroneal nerve at the head of the fibula, performed a 4-week training (16 sessions) of the normal leg, at 40°/sangular velocity. Before and after training, the subject underwent a test-retest assessment procedure including: 1) bilateral isokinetic dynamometry of the dorsiflexors’ performance; 2) stance and gait-analysis; 3) recording of cortical and spinal drives to the affected leg, through measurement of central motor conduction time, input-output curve, cortical silent period (cSP), SICI, ICF, SICF, H-reflex, V-wave and Mwave. Results The untrained-affected dorsiflexors showed considerable increases in strength (peak-torque: pre=23N/m; post=31N/m), power (pre=14W; post=22W) and total-work (pre=9J; post=22J). Ankle dorsiflexion increased from 4 to 11 degrees. Overall gait pattern was unchanged, however a better stance performance was suggested by changes in heel-to-forefoot contact-time % of stance-time (pre=0.5%; post=3.4%) and mean step-length (pre=30cm; post=34cm). An increase in cortico-spinal drive to the untrained-affected leg was revealed only by reduction of cSP duration (120%RMT: pre=154ms; post=144ms; 150%RMT: pre=196ms; post=182ms). Conclusions Maximal isokinetic cross-training induced considerable improvements in the performance of the untrainedaffected leg with a parallel increase in its cortico-spinal drive. In this report cross-training was a viable and effective rehabilitative approach to drop-foot.
2014
Does Cross-Training balance strength asymmetry in healthy subjects? A proof-of-concept trial / Manca, A.; Ortu, E.; Ginatempo, F.; Pisanu, F.; Tolu, E.; Deriu, Franca. - In: CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 1388-2457. - 125:Supplement 1(2014), pp. 111-112. (Intervento presentato al convegno 30th International Congress of Clinical Neurophysiology (ICCN) of the IFCN tenutosi a Berlino nel 20-23 marzo 2014) [10.1016/S1388-2457(14)50366-5].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/70845
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