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Impact of subclinical neck pain on eye and hand movements in goal-directed upper limb aiming movements.

Authors :
Cheema, Navika
Yielder, Paul
Sanmugananthan, Praveen
Ambalavanar, Ushani
Murphy, Bernadette
Source :
Human Movement Science. Aug2024, Vol. 96, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Individuals with untreated, mild-to-moderate recurrent neck pain or stiffness (subclinical neck pain (SCNP)) have been shown to have impairments in upper limb proprioception, and altered cerebellar processing. It is probable that aiming trajectories will be impacted since individuals with SCNP cannot rely on accurate proprioceptive feedback or feedforward processing (body schema) for movement planning and execution, due to altered afferent input from the neck. SCNP participants may thus rely more on visual feedback, to accommodate for impaired cerebellar processing. This quasi-experimental study sought to determine whether upper limb kinematics and oculomotor processes were impacted in those with SCNP. 25 SCNP and 25 control participants who were right-hand dominant performed bidirectional aiming movements using two different weighted styli (light or heavy) while wearing an eye-tracking device. Those with SCNP had a greater time to and time after peak velocity, which corresponded with a longer upper limb movement and reaction time, seen as greater constant error, less undershoot in the upwards direction and greater undershoot in the downwards direction compared to controls. SCNP participants also showed a trend towards a quicker ocular reaction and movement time compared to controls, while the movement distance was fairly similar between groups. This study indicates that SCNP alters aiming performances, with greater reliance on visual feedback, likely due to altered proprioceptive input leading to altered cerebellar processing. • Subclinical neck pain (SCNP) is associated with worse upper limb proprioception. • Inaccurate sensory input re-weighted by central nervous system with accurate input. • Unclear if visual input contributes to differences in aiming strategies in SCNP. • SCNP's eyes appear to react and fixate quickly on the target, unlike their limb. • Findings support movement strategy differences in SCNP, compared to controls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01679457
Volume :
96
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Movement Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178907597
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.humov.2024.103238