Predictability and Complexity of Fine and Gross Motor Skills in Fibromyalgia Patients: A Pilot Study

Sports (Basel). 2024 Mar 25;12(4):90. doi: 10.3390/sports12040090.

Abstract

Background: Fine and gross motor tasks are usually used to evaluate behavioral dysfunctions and can be applied to diseases of the central nervous system, such as fibromyalgia (FM). Non-linear measures have allowed for deeper motor control analysis, focusing on the process and on the quality of movement. Therefore, to assess uncertainty, irregularity, and structural richness of a time series, different algorithms of entropy can be computed. The aim of this study was to (i) verify the single-scale and multiscale entropy values in fine and gross motor movements and (ii) to verify whether fine and gross motor tasks are sensitive to characterizing FM patients.

Methods: The sample consisted of 20 females (46.2 ± 12.8 years) divided in two groups, an experimental group with 10 FM subjects and a control group with 10 subjects without FM. Inertial sensors were used to collect the finger tapping test (FTT), walking, and sit-and-stand task data.

Results: Regarding fine motor skills, patients with FM showed a loss of structural richness (complexity), but they had information processing with greater control in the FTT, probably to simplify task execution and for correction of the movement. On the other hand, people without FM seemed to have more automatic control of the movement when performed with the preferred hand and exhibited similar difficulties to the FM group when performed with the non-preferred hand. Gross motor tasks showed similar entropy values for both groups.

Conclusions: The results show that FM patients have movement controls primarily at the level of the motor cortex, whereas people without FM perform movement at the medullary level, especially in fine motor tasks, indicating that the FTT is sensitive to the presence of FM, especially when performed with the preferred hand.

Keywords: IMU; entropy; fibromyalgia; fine motor control; gross motor control; multiscale; single scale.

Grants and funding

The work of Marco Branco, Cristiana Mercê, David Catela and Nancy Brígida was partly supported by the SPRINT-Sport Physical Activity and Health Research & Innovation Center, Santarem Polytechnic University, Rio Maior, Portugal. The work of David Catela, Marco Branco, Cristiana Mercê and Nancy Brígida was partly supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology under Grant UIDB/04748/2020 to CIEQV—Centro de Investigação em Qualidade de Vida.