The ForceLoss study aims to develop personalised modeling and simulation procedures to enable the differential diagnosis for the loss of muscle force, namely dynapenia. The primary causes of dynapenia can be identified in a diffuse or selective sarcopenia, a lack of activation (inhibition), or suboptimal motor control. Each of these causes requires different interventions, but a reliable differential diagnosis is currently impossible. While biomedical instruments and tools can provide valuable information, it is often left to the experience of the single clinican to integrate such information into a complete diagnostic picture. An accurate diagnosis for dynapenia is important for a number of pathologies, including neurological diseases, age-related frailty, diabetes, and orthopaedic conditions. The hypothesis is that the use of mechanistic, subject-specific models (digital twins) to simulate a maximal isometric knee extension task, informed by experimental measures may be employed to conduct a robust differential diagnosis for dynapenia. In this study, on patients candidate for knee arthroplasty, the investigators will expand (i) the experimental protocol previously developed and tested on healthy volunteers with a measure of involuntary muscle contraction (superimposed neuromuscular electrical stimulation, SNMES), a hand-grip test, measures of bio-impedance and clinical questionnaires, and (ii) the modeling and simulation framework to include one additional step (to check for muscle inhibition). Medical imaging, electromyography (EMG) and dynamometry data will be collected and combined to inform a digital twin of each participant. Biomechanical computer simulations of a Maximal Voluntary Isometric Contraction (MVIC) task will then be performed. Comparing the models' estimates to in vivo dynamometry measurements and EMG data, the investigators will test one by one the three possible causes of dynapenia, and, through a process of hypothesis falsification will exclude those that do not explain the observed loss of muscle force.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Magnetic resonance images, electromyography and dynamometry data will be used to develop and inform personalised musculoskeletal models
IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli
Bologna, Italy
Muscle volume
Full lower limb MRI data will be acquired with subjects in supine position. Individual muscle volumes (in cm3) will be segmented using commercial software and stored in anonymized form.
Time frame: at baseline (Day 0)
MVIC Torque
Dynamometry data will be acquired while participants perform a MVIC leg extension test. The maximum torque values (Nm) measured over three repetitions will be recorded. These correspond to the values observed in correspondence of the plateaux of force, developed over a sustained contraction.
Time frame: at baseline (Day 0)
Muscle Inhibition level
The difference between the maximal force exerted during the MVIC test (voluntary contraction) and that achieved when the muscles are electrically stimulated (involuntary contraction) will be computed.
Time frame: at baseline (Day 0)
Co-contraction index (CCI)
Experimental EMG data will be recorded from the major lower limb muscles involved in the knee extension, while participants perform a maximal voluntary isometric contraction on a dynamometer (i.e., MVIC test to quantify muscle strength). The co-contraction index, defined as the relative activation of agonist and antagonist muscles (for this task: quadriceps and hamstrings) in the act of kicking (MVIC test), will be computed according to Li et al (2020).
Time frame: at baseline (Day 0)
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