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Published in: Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Research

Postural orientation and equilibrium processes associated with increased postural sway in autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

Authors: Zheng Wang, Rami R. Hallac, Kaitlin C. Conroy, Stormi P. White, Alex A. Kane, Amy L. Collinsworth, John A. Sweeney, Matthew W. Mosconi

Published in: Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Increased postural sway has been repeatedly documented in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Characterizing the control processes underlying this deficit, including postural orientation and equilibrium, may provide key insights into neurophysiological mechanisms associated with ASD. Postural orientation refers to children’s ability to actively align their trunk and head with respect to their base of support, while postural equilibrium is an active process whereby children coordinate ankle dorsi-/plantar-flexion and hip abduction/adduction movements to stabilize their upper body. Dynamic engagement of each of these control processes is important for maintaining postural stability, though neither postural orientation nor equilibrium has been studied in ASD.

Methods

Twenty-two children with ASD and 21 age and performance IQ-matched typically developing (TD) controls completed three standing tests. During static stance, participants were instructed to stand as still as possible. During dynamic stances, participants swayed at a comfortable speed and magnitude in either anterior-posterior (AP) or mediolateral (ML) directions. The center of pressure (COP) standard deviation and trajectory length were examined to determine if children with ASD showed increased postural sway. Postural orientation was assessed using a novel virtual time-to-contact (VTC) approach that characterized spatiotemporal dimensions of children’s postural sway (i.e., body alignment) relative to their postural limitation boundary, defined as the maximum extent to which each child could sway in each direction. Postural equilibrium was quantified by evaluating the amount of shared or mutual information of COP time series measured along the AP and ML directions.

Results

Consistent with prior studies, children with ASD showed increased postural sway during both static and dynamic stances relative to TD children. In regard to postural orientation processes, children with ASD demonstrated reduced spatial perception of their postural limitation boundary towards target directions and reduced time to correct this error during dynamic postural sways but not during static stance. Regarding postural equilibrium, they showed a compromised ability to decouple ankle dorsi-/plantar-flexion and hip abduction/adduction processes during dynamic stances.

Conclusions

These results suggest that deficits in both postural orientation and equilibrium processes contribute to reduced postural stability in ASD. Specifically, increased postural sway in ASD appears to reflect patients’ impaired perception of their body movement relative to their own postural limitation boundary as well as a reduced ability to decouple distinct ankle and hip movements to align their body during standing. Our findings that deficits in postural orientation and equilibrium are more pronounced during dynamic compared to static stances suggests that the increased demands of everyday activities in which children must dynamically shift their COP involve more severe postural control deficits in ASD relative to static stance conditions that often are studied. Systematic assessment of dynamic postural control processes in ASD may provide important insights into new treatment targets and neurodevelopmental mechanisms.
Appendix
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Glossary
Force
Force is a push or pull on an object. If the net force on an object is not zero, then the object accelerates (or changes its velocity). Force is a vector and has both magnitude and direction. Force recorded from a force platform includes measurements in three dimensions, including anterior-posterior, mediolateral, and vertical directions. Force along the vertical direction is typically referred to the ground reaction force.
Moment
The moment is the turning effect produced by a net force perpendicular to the point of rotation.
COP
The point location of the vertical ground reaction force vector. The COP represents a weighted average of pressures over the surface area (i.e., feet) in contact with the ground. It has been used as an indirect measure of individuals’ postural sway. The COP can be derived from the force and moment data collected from a force platform (Formular1).
COPAP
Center of pressure time series in the anterior-posterior direction
COPML
Center of pressure time series in the mediolateral direction
VTC
Virtual time-to-contact, a measurement quantifies the spatiotemporal relation of an individual’s postural sway to his/her own postural limitation boundary
VTC (ω)Spatial
Spatial virtual time-to-contact, a resultant variable from the VTC measurement characterizing the spatial relation of an individual’s postural sway to his/her own postural sway boundary
VTC (τ)Temporal
Temporal virtual time-to-contact, a resultant variable from the VTC measurement characterizing the temporal relation of an individual’s postural sway to his/her own postural sway boundary
Mutual information
In probability and information theory, the mutual information of two random variables measures their mutual dependency quantifiing the amount of information obtained about one random variable through the other
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Metadata
Title
Postural orientation and equilibrium processes associated with increased postural sway in autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
Authors
Zheng Wang
Rami R. Hallac
Kaitlin C. Conroy
Stormi P. White
Alex A. Kane
Amy L. Collinsworth
John A. Sweeney
Matthew W. Mosconi
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders / Issue 1/2016
Print ISSN: 1866-1947
Electronic ISSN: 1866-1955
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s11689-016-9178-1

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