This study quantified perception and reorientation ability after passive horizontal rotations in thirteen children with cerebral palsy (CP). They stood barefoot on a platform in front of a fixed reference point (static posture task, SPT) and were then blindfolded and passively rotated with six velocity profiles (maximum angular velocity: 57 degrees/s; rotation amplitudes: +/- 90 degrees, +/- 180 degrees and +/- 360 degrees). After the perturbation, the blindfolded children were asked to point to the fixed reference point with their preferred hand (pointing task, PT) and to step back to the initial position on the stationary platform (reorientation task, RT). In order to gain further insight into rotational attitude, the results were comparatively examined with body segment rotations determined using standardized gait analysis (gait task, GT). The kinematic evaluations were conducted using an optoelectronic system: for SPT, PT and RT we confined the analysis, in the horizontal plane, to the head and upper pointing arm of the subject and to the platform; for GT a full body analysis was performed. When CP children were passively rotated towards their more affected side, they overestimated the imposed angle in PT but under-reproduced it in RT. A higher variability emerged in left-hemiplegic children, confirming that the spatial disorganization is predominantly related to right brain lesion. Patients tended to rotate in GT towards the more affected side while in RT they showed an opposite trend. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Spatial rotational orientation ability in standing children with cerebral palsy / Maurizio, Petrarca; Cappa, Paolo; Giulia, Zanelli; Michelina, Armando; Enrico, Castelli; Alain, Berthoz. - In: GAIT & POSTURE. - ISSN 0966-6362. - STAMPA. - 37:4(2013), pp. 494-499. [10.1016/j.gaitpost.2012.08.022]

Spatial rotational orientation ability in standing children with cerebral palsy

CAPPA, Paolo;
2013

Abstract

This study quantified perception and reorientation ability after passive horizontal rotations in thirteen children with cerebral palsy (CP). They stood barefoot on a platform in front of a fixed reference point (static posture task, SPT) and were then blindfolded and passively rotated with six velocity profiles (maximum angular velocity: 57 degrees/s; rotation amplitudes: +/- 90 degrees, +/- 180 degrees and +/- 360 degrees). After the perturbation, the blindfolded children were asked to point to the fixed reference point with their preferred hand (pointing task, PT) and to step back to the initial position on the stationary platform (reorientation task, RT). In order to gain further insight into rotational attitude, the results were comparatively examined with body segment rotations determined using standardized gait analysis (gait task, GT). The kinematic evaluations were conducted using an optoelectronic system: for SPT, PT and RT we confined the analysis, in the horizontal plane, to the head and upper pointing arm of the subject and to the platform; for GT a full body analysis was performed. When CP children were passively rotated towards their more affected side, they overestimated the imposed angle in PT but under-reproduced it in RT. A higher variability emerged in left-hemiplegic children, confirming that the spatial disorganization is predominantly related to right brain lesion. Patients tended to rotate in GT towards the more affected side while in RT they showed an opposite trend. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2013
balance; cerebral palsy; gait; hemiplegia; motor control; perception; postural perturbation; rotating platform; spatial orientation; turning platform
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Spatial rotational orientation ability in standing children with cerebral palsy / Maurizio, Petrarca; Cappa, Paolo; Giulia, Zanelli; Michelina, Armando; Enrico, Castelli; Alain, Berthoz. - In: GAIT & POSTURE. - ISSN 0966-6362. - STAMPA. - 37:4(2013), pp. 494-499. [10.1016/j.gaitpost.2012.08.022]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/555342
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