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Background and Purpose. Spasticity is a common impairment in children with cerebral palsy (CP). The purpose of this study was to examine differences in passive resistive torque, reflex activity, coactivation, and reciprocal facilitation during assessments of the spasticity of knee flexor and knee extensor muscles in children with CP and different levels of functional ability.
Subjects. Study participants were 20 children with CP and 10 children with typical development (TD). The 20 children with CP were equally divided into 2 groups: 10 children classified in Gross Motor Function Classification Scale (GMFCS) level I and 10 children classified in GMFCS level III.
Methods. One set of 10 passive movements between 25 and 90 degrees of knee flexion and one set of 10 passive movements between 90 and 25 degrees of knee flexion were completed with an isokinetic dynamometer at 15°/s, 90°/s, and 180°/s and concurrent surface electromyography of the vastus lateralis and medial hamstring muscles.
Results. Children in the GMFCS level III group demonstrated significantly more peak knee flexor torque with passive movements at 180°/s than children with TD. Children in the GMFCS level I and level III groups demonstrated significantly more repetitions with medial hamstring muscle activity, vastus lateralis muscle activity, and co-contraction than children with TD during the assessment of knee flexor spasticity at a velocity of 180°/s.
Discussion and Conclusion. Children with CP and more impaired functional mobility may demonstrate more knee flexor spasticity and reflex activity, as measured by isokinetic dynamometry, than children with TD. However, the finding of increased reflex activity with no increase in torque in the GMFCS I group in a comparison with the TD group suggests that reflex activity may play a less prominent role in spasticity.
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous collection of nonprogressive motor disorders of the developing brain that may occur antenatally or postnatally up to the age of 2 years.1 The most common type of CP, in terms of motor control, is spastic CP, which affects approximately 70% to 80% of the population of children with CP.2 Although alternative definitions for spasticity have been proposed,3 spasticity has been most commonly defined as a "velocity dependent increase in tonic stretch reflexes (muscle tone) with exaggerated tendon jerks, resulting from hyperexcitability of the stretch...