Publications

2023

McPherson, April L, Nathan D Schilaty, Sarah Anderson, Takashi Nagai, and Nathaniel A Bates. (2023) 2023. “Arthrogenic Muscle Inhibition After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury: Injured and Uninjured Limb Recovery over Time.”. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living 5: 1143376. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2023.1143376.

INTRODUCTION: It is well documented that marked weakness of the quadriceps is present after knee joint injury. This joint trauma induces a presynaptic reflex inhibition of musculature surrounding the joint, termed arthrogenic muscle inhibition (AMI). The extent to which anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury affects thigh musculature motor unit activity, which may affect restoration of thigh muscle strength after injury, is undetermined.

METHODS: A randomized protocol of knee flexion and extension isometric contractions (10%-50% maximal voluntary isometric contraction) were performed for each leg on 54 subjects with electromyography array electrodes placed on the vastus medialis, vastus lateralis, semitendinosus, and biceps femoris. Longitudinal assessments for motor unit recruitment and average firing rate were acquired at 6-month intervals for 1 year post ACL injury.

RESULTS: The ACL-injured population demonstrated smaller quadriceps and hamstrings motor unit size (assessed via motor unit action potential peak-to-peak amplitude) and altered firing rate activity in both injured and uninjured limbs compared to healthy controls. Motor unit activity remained altered compared to healthy controls at 12 months post ACL reconstruction (ACLR).

DISCUSSION: Motor unit activity was altered after ACLR up to 12 months post-surgery. Further research is warranted to optimize rehabilitation interventions that adequately address altered motor unit activity and improve safety and success with return to sport after ACLR. In the interim, evidence based clinical reasoning with a focus on development of muscular strength and power capacity should be the impetus behind rehabilitation programming to address motor control deficits.

Mitchell, Cecilia, V, Takashi Nagai, Nathaniel A Bates, and Nathan D Schilaty. (2023) 2023. “Neck Strength and Force in Reaction Time Task of Adolescent Athletes With and Without Concussion History: A Pilot Study.”. Physical Therapy in Sport : Official Journal of the Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine 61: 192-97. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ptsp.2023.04.008.

OBJECTIVES: Assess the impact of concussion by comparing reaction time, peak force recruitment, and rate of force development of adolescent athletes returning from concussion against age- and sex-matched controls in visual-elicited neck movement.

DESIGN: Athletes sat secured in a custom-built isometric device with their heads secured in a helmet and attached to a 6-axis load cell. They performed neck flexion, extension, and lateral flexion in response to a visual cue. Three trials in each direction were used for statistical analyses; peak force and rate of force development were normalized against athlete mass.

SETTING: Laboratory.

PARTICIPANTS: 26 adolescent/young adult athletes (8F/18M), either recently concussed (and cleared for return to sport) or an age- and sex-matched healthy control.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Reaction time, angle, standard deviation of angle, deviation from target angle, peak force, and RFD over 50, 100, 150,and 200 ms of movement were measured for each trial.

RESULTS: Concussed athletes had decreased normalized peak force (P = 0.008) and rate of force development (P < 0.001-0.007). In neck extension, concussed athletes also had decreased movement precision (P = 0.012).

CONCLUSIONS: Concussion is associated with alterations of neck biomechanics that decrease overall neck strength.

Chaney, Grace K, David A Krause, John H Hollman, Vanessa A Anderson, Sarah E Heider, Sean Thomez, Shaelyn N Vaughn, and Nathan D Schilaty. (2023) 2023. “Recurrence Quantification Analysis of Isokinetic Strength Tests: A Comparison of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstructed and the Uninjured Limb.”. Clinical Biomechanics (Bristol, Avon) 104: 105929. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2023.105929.

BACKGROUND: Despite widespread use of return to sport testing following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, studies suggest inadequacy in current testing criteria, such as limb symmetry index calculations, to determine athletes' readiness to return to play. Recurrence quantification analysis, an emerging non-linear data analysis tool, may reveal subtle neuromuscular differences between the injured and uninjured limb that are not captured by traditional testing. We hypothesized that isokinetic torque curve data of the injured limb would demonstrate lower determinism and entropy as compared to the uninjured limb.

METHODS: 102 patients (44 M, 58F, 10 ± 1 months post-anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction) underwent isokinetic quadriceps strength testing using a HumacNorm dynamometer. Patients completed maximum effort knee extension and flexion at 60°/sec. Data were post-processed with a MATLAB CRQA Graphical User Interface and determinism and entropy values were extracted. Paired-sample t-tests (α = 0.05) were used to compare data from the injured and uninjured limb.

FINDINGS: Determinism and entropy values in the torque curves were lower in the injured limb than the uninjured limb (p < 0.001). Our findings indicate there is less predictability and complexity present in the torque signals of injured limbs.

INTERPRETATION: Recurrence quantification analysis can be used to assess neuromuscular differences between limbs in patients who have undergone anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Our findings offer further evidence that there are changes to the neuromuscular system which persist following reconstruction. Further investigation is needed to establish thresholds of determinism and entropy values needed for safe return to sport and to evaluate the utility of recurrence quantification analysis as a return to sport criterion.

Schilaty, Nathan D, April L McPherson, Takashi Nagai, and Nathaniel A Bates. (2023) 2023. “Arthrogenic Muscle Inhibition Manifests in Thigh Musculature Motor Unit Characteristics After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury.”. European Journal of Sport Science 23 (5): 840-50. https://doi.org/10.1080/17461391.2022.2056520.

Joint trauma induces a presynaptic reflex inhibition termed arthrogenic muscle inhibition (AMI) that prevents complete activation of muscles. Reduced motor unit (MU) output is a hypothesised mechanism for persistent strength deficits. The objective of this study was to determine MU characteristics of thigh musculature and determine how they change with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury compared to healthy controls. A randomised protocol of knee flexion/extension isometric contractions (10-50% maximal voluntary isometric contraction) was performed for each leg with surface EMG 5-pin array electrodes placed on the vastus medialis, vastus lateralis, semitendinosus and biceps femoris. Longitudinal assessments for average rate coding, recruitment thresholds and MU action potentials were acquired at 6-month intervals. With exception of the vastus medialis, all thigh musculature of ACL-injured demonstrated smaller MU action potential peak-to-peak amplitude. For average rate coding, ACL-injured demonstrated lower coding rates than Controls for the quadriceps (p < .05) and higher rates than Controls for the hamstrings (p < .05). These MU characteristics were different from Controls after ACL reconstruction up to 12 months post-surgery, yet maximal strength increased during this time frame. As thigh MU characteristics are known across phases of ACL rehabilitation, future studies can assess these patterns of motor control and their potential to determine risk of re-injury. Further, future rehabilitation can target specific intervention programmes to restore motor control.HighlightsMotor unit strategies of arthrogenic muscle inhibition are characterised for the first time via decomposed EMG.Motor unit deficits of thigh musculature persist throughout all phases of ACL rehabilitation, even after return-to-sport.After ACL injury, motor unit sizes at similar recruitment thresholds were smaller than those of healthy controls.

Alzouhayli, Kenan, Nathan D Schilaty, Takashi Nagai, Luca Rigamonti, April L McPherson, Benjamin Holmes, and Nathaniel A Bates. (2023) 2023. “The Effectiveness of Clinic versus Home-Based, Artificial Intelligence-Guided Therapy in Patients With Low Back Pain: Non-Randomized Clinical Trial.”. Clinical Biomechanics (Bristol, Avon) 109: 106069. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2023.106069.

BACKGROUND: Low back pain is a common cause of disability in the US with increasing financial burden on healthcare. A variety of treatment options exist to combat LBP. Home-based therapy is a low-cost option, but there is a lack of data on how it compares to therapy in clinical settings. It was hypothesized that when using artificial intelligence-guided therapy, supervised in-clinic interventions would have a greater influence on patient-reported outcomes and strength than unsupervised, home interventions.

METHODS: This is a non-randomized controlled trial of 51 patients (28 female, 23 male). The investigation compared an 8-week, core-focused exercise intervention in a Clinic (supervised) versus Home (unsupervised) setting. Outcome variables included measures of strength, performance, and patient-reported outcomes related to function. Generalized linear regression (p < 0.05) was used to evaluate outcomes were evaluated with respect to sex, intervention setting, and time.

FINDINGS: Male subjects exhibited greater strength (p ≤ 0.02) but not greater patient-reported outcomes (p ≥ 0.30) than females. The Clinic group exhibited slightly greater lateral pull-down strength (p = 0.002), greater eccentric phase range of motion during overhead press (p < 0.01), and shorter concentric phase duration during bench press (p < 0.01) than the Home group. Significance between groups was not observed in any other strength, performance, or patient-reported outcome (p ≥ 0.11).

INTERPRETATION: A lack of consistent significance indicated that the hypothesis was not supported. AI-guided, telehealth exercise produced comparable outcomes in both home and clinical settings. Telehealth options may offer a lower-cost alternative to clinic-based exercise therapy for patients with nonspecific lower back pain.

Schilaty, Nathan D, April L McPherson, Takashi Nagai, and Nathaniel A Bates. (2023) 2023. “Differences in Psychological Readiness for Return to Sport After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Is Evident in Thigh Musculature Motor Unit Characteristics.”. BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine 9 (3): e001609. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2023-001609.

BACKGROUND: Following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury, many athletes that undergo surgery and 6-9 months of rehabilitation struggle to return to sport. Evidence suggests that psychological factors contribute to this failure to return-to-sport.

OBJECTIVE: Determine the motor control relationship between thigh musculature motor unit characteristics and psychological readiness to return to sport between ACL-injured and healthy controls.

STUDY DESIGN: A longitudinal cohort study.

METHODS: Athletes longitudinally completed the ACL Return to Sport after Injury (ACL-RSI) survey and isometric strength measures with a measurement of electromyography (EMG) of the vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, biceps femoris, and semitendinosus. A score cut-off of 61 on the ACL-RSI was used to divide ACL-injured groups. EMG was decomposed to provide each identified motor unit's characteristics (amplitude, average firing rate, etc).

RESULTS: Data demonstrated increased average firing rate for hamstrings (p<0.001), decreased average firing rate for vastus lateralis (p<0.001) and decreased motor unit size for both the quadriceps and hamstrings at return-to-sport post-ACL reconstruction compared with sex-matched and age-matched healthy controls (p<0.001). Furthermore, there were marked differences in disparate ACL-RSI scores between ACL-injured athletes.

CONCLUSIONS: At return to sport, ACL-injured athletes have major alterations of thigh musculature motor control, with smaller motor units used by those with low ACL-RSI scores. This study uniquely demonstrates objective thigh muscle motor unit characteristics that coincide with subjective reports of psychological readiness. This information will be important to address psychomotor complexes of injury for future rehabilitation protocols.

Schilaty, Nathan, Nathaniel Bates, Benjamin Holmes, and Takashi Nagai. (2023) 2023. “Group Differences and Associations Between Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physical Characteristics in Chronic Low Back Pain Patients and Healthy Controls.”. Clinical Biomechanics (Bristol, Avon) 106: 106009. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2023.106009.

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic low back pain can exhibit altered slower gait, poor balance, and lower strength/power, and psychological dysfunctions such as pain catastrophizing and fear of movement. Few studies have investigated the relationships between physical and psychological dysfunctions. This study examined associations between patient-reported outcomes (pain interference, physical function, central sensitization, and kinesiophobia) and physical characteristics (gait, balance, and trunk sensorimotor characteristics).

METHODS: Laboratory testing included a 4-m walk, balance, and trunk sensorimotor testing with 18 patients and 15 controls. Gait and balance were collected with inertial measurement units. Isokinetic dynamometry measured trunk sensorimotor characteristics. Patient-reported outcomes included PROMIS Pain Interference / Physical Function, Central Sensitization Inventory, and Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia. Independent t-tests or Mann-Whitney U tests were used to compare between groups. Additionally, Spearman's rank correlation coefficient (rs) established associations between physical and psychological domains, and Fisher z-tests compared correlation coefficient values between groups (significance P < 0.05).

FINDINGS: The patient group had worse tandem balance and all patient-reported outcomes (P < 0.05) while no group differences were observed in gait and trunk sensorimotor characteristics. There were significant correlations between worse central sensitization and poor tandem balance (rs = 0.446-0.619, P < 0.05) and lower peak force and rate of force development (rs = -0.429-0.702, P < 0.05).

INTERPRETATION: Observed group differences in tandem balance agree with previous studies, indicating impaired proprioception. The current findings provide preliminary evidence that balance and trunk sensorimotor characteristics were significantly associated with patient-reported outcomes in patients. Early and period screening could help clinicians further categorize patients and develop objective treatment plans.

Nagai, Takashi, Nathaniel A Bates, Luca Rigamonti, John H Hollman, Edward R Laskowski, and Nathan D Schilaty. (2023) 2023. “Effects of Neuromuscular and Proprioceptive Training on Self-Reported Wellness and Health Scores and Knee Sensorimotor Characteristics in Active Seniors.”. Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies 36: 370-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbmt.2023.06.008.

INTRODUCTION: Athletes regularly engage in comprehensive neuromuscular and proprioceptive training (NPT) to prevent musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries. NPT exercises such as movement technique, agility, balance, and posture as well as yoga-based stretching and slow/deep breathing have shown added benefits in psychological and other well-being. This study aimed to examine the effects of NPT on knee sensorimotor characteristics and multi-domain wellness and health scores in active seniors.

METHODS: Twenty seniors participated in the NPT intervention (15-20min session twice a week for 10 weeks) while the control group did not receive any intervention. All participants completed surveys (general health, frailty, anxiety, stress, mindfulness, optimism, and sleep quality) and laboratory testing before and after intervention. Laboratory testing included frailty tests (grip strength, 4-m walk speed, and calcaneal ultrasound-based bone density) and knee sensorimotor characteristics (peak force, visual-motor reaction time, and force steadiness).

RESULTS: There was significant increase in general mental health (Short Form 36 Mental Health; p = 0.005) and decrease in stress (Perceived Stress Scale; p = 0.010) and sleep disturbances (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; p = 0.019) post-intervention while no significant changes were observed in the control group (p = 0.310-0.654). Peak knee forces in all directions and some visual-motor reaction time and force steadiness were significantly improved post-intervention only in the experimental group (p = 0.001-0.038).

CONCLUSION: A simple, yet, comprehensive NPT has potential to improve MSK health as well as various domains of well-being among active seniors.

Nagai, Takashi, Nathan D Schilaty, Hanwen Wong, Valerie C Keller, Sean T Stiennon, Ryan W B Chang, Michael J Stuart, and David A Krause. (2023) 2023. “Acute Effects of an Isometric Neck Warm-up Programme on Neck Performance Characteristics and Ultrasound-Based Morphology.”. Annals of Medicine 55 (2): 2295402. https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2023.2295402.

OBJECTIVE: Athletic performance can be enhanced immediately after an isometric warm-up, a phenomenon termed post-activation performance enhancement (PAPE). While isometric warm-ups can improve lower extremity sprint and jump performance, neck-specific isometric warm-ups need development and validation for mild traumatic brain disorders and neck pain. This study examined acute effects of isometric warm-ups on neck performance and morphology.

METHODS: Arm 1: Twenty-six adults (13 M:13F) completed neck performance testing before and after a 10-minute neck isometric warm-up or stationary bike (sham) between two visits. Testing included visual-motor reaction time, peak force, rate of force development, force steadiness, and force replication/proprioception measured by a 6-axis load cell. An inclinometer assessed range-of-motion. Paired t-tests and two-way ANOVA examined effects of neck/bike warm-up and interaction effects, respectively. Arm 2: 24 adults (11 M:13F) completed ultrasound scans of cervical muscles: before 20-minute rest (sham), and before/after a 5-min neck isometric warm-up. Longus colli cross-sectional area and sternocleidomastoid/upper trapezius thickness and stiffness, and cervical extensors thickness was assessed. One-way ANOVA compared morphological values at sham, before, and after warm-up. Significance was set at p < 0.05.

RESULTS: Isometric neck warm-up increased rate of force development in flexion (p = 0.022), extension (p = 0.001-0.003), right lateral flexion (p = 0.004-0.032), left lateral flexion (p = 0.005-0.014), while peak force improved only in left lateral flexion (p = 0.032). Lateral flexion range-of-motion increased after neck warm-up (p = 0.003-0.026). Similarly, longus colli cross-sectional area (p = 0.016) and sternocleidomastoid thickness (p = 0.004) increased.

CONCLUSIONS: Increased neck performance characteristics and morphology are likely due to PAPE effects of isometric neck warm-up. For coaches and athletes, simple isometric contractions could be added to existing warm-ups to reduce prevalence, incidence, and severity of mild traumatic brain injuries and neck pain.