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Cutaneous stimulation at the ankle: a differential effect on proprioceptive postural control according to the participants' preferred sensory strategy
Author(s) -
Pavailler Sébastien,
Hintzy Frédérique,
Horvais Nicolas,
Forestier Nicolas
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of foot and ankle research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.763
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 1757-1146
DOI - 10.1186/s13047-016-0140-y
Subject(s) - barefoot , proprioception , ankle , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , stimulation , sensory system , physical therapy , anatomy , psychology , neuroscience
Abstract Background Ankle movements can be partially encoded by cutaneous afferents. However, little is known about the central integration of these cutaneous signals, and whether individual differences exist in this integration. The aim of this study was to determine whether the effect of cutaneous stimulation at the ankle would differ depending on the participants' preferred sensory strategy appraised by relative proprioceptive weighting (RPw). Methods Forty‐seven active young individuals free of lower‐limb injury stood on a force platform either barefoot or wearing a custom‐designed bootee. Vibrations (60 Hz, 0.5 mm) were applied either to the peroneal tendons or to the lumbar paraspinal muscles. Results The barefoot RPw was strongly negatively correlated to the absolute change in RPw measured in the bootee condition ( r  = −0.81, P  < 0.001). Participants were then grouped depending on their barefoot RPw value. The RPw was significantly higher in the bootee condition than in the barefoot condition only for participants with low barefoot RPw. Conclusions The external cutaneous stimulation given by the bootee increased the weight of ankle proprioceptive signals only for participants with low barefoot RPw. This result confirmed that optimization of the ankle proprioceptive signals provided by cutaneous afferent stimulation has a differential effect depending on the participants' preferred sensory strategy.

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