Sensorized Assessment of Dynamic Locomotor Imagery in People with Stroke and Healthy Subjects

Sensors (Basel). 2020 Aug 13;20(16):4545. doi: 10.3390/s20164545.

Abstract

Dynamic motor imagery (dMI) is a motor imagery task associated with movements partially mimicking those mentally represented. As well as conventional motor imagery, dMI has been typically assessed by mental chronometry tasks. In this paper, an instrumented approach was proposed for quantifying the correspondence between upper and lower limb oscillatory movements performed on the spot during the dMI of walking vs. during actual walking. Magneto-inertial measurement units were used to measure limb swinging in three different groups: young adults, older adults and stroke patients. Participants were tested in four experimental conditions: (i) simple limb swinging; (ii) limb swinging while imagining to walk (dMI-task); (iii) mental chronometry task, without any movement (pure MI); (iv) actual level walking at comfortable speed. Limb swinging was characterized in terms of the angular velocity, frequency of oscillations and sinusoidal waveform. The dMI was effective at reproducing upper limb oscillations more similar to those occurring during walking for all the three groups, but some exceptions occurred for lower limbs. This finding could be related to the sensory feedback, stretch reflexes and ground reaction forces occurring for lower limbs and not for upper limbs during walking. In conclusion, the instrumented approach through wearable motion devices adds significant information to the current dMI approach, further supporting their applications in neurorehabilitation for monitoring imagery training protocols in patients with stroke.

Keywords: gait; inertial sensors; instrumented movement analysis; motor imagery; neurorehabilitation; stroke; walking.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Healthy Volunteers
  • Humans
  • Lower Extremity
  • Male
  • Monitoring, Physiologic*
  • Movement
  • Stroke*
  • Walking*
  • Young Adult