Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Strength In Knees And Ankles Less With Neuropathy

Today's short post from medicalxpress.com (see link below) may seem a no-brainer to many people living with neuropathy but it's always useful to have a symptom recognised and verified. Many neuropathy patients notice that their ankle and knee strength diminishes the longer they have the disease. Many people also put that down to age, or rheumatism or other causes but the fact is that extensor muscles in those areas are affected by nerve damage and the lack of, or incorrect nerve signals which normally control physical response. The link between nerves, muscles and instability then becomes another symptom of neuropathic problems.

Ankle, knee strength generation slower with diabetic neuropathy 

Oct. 14 in Diabetes Care (HealthDay)—

When walking up and down stairs, patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) are slower at generating strength at the ankle and knee compared to control participants, which may increase the risk of falls, according to a study published online Oct. 14 in Diabetes Care.

Joseph C. Handsaker, from the Manchester Metropolitan University in the United Kingdom, and colleagues examined 63 participants (21 patients with DPN, 21 controls with diabetes, and 21 healthy controls) walking up and down a custom-built staircase. Analysis included assessment of speed of strength generation at the ankle and knee and muscle activation patterns of the ankle and knee extensor muscles.

The researchers found that patients with neuropathy displayed significantly slower ankle and knee strength generation than healthy controls during stair ascent and descent (P; 0.05). Ankle and knee extensor muscles were activated significantly later by patients with neuropathy during ascent and they also took longer to reach peak activation (P; 0.05). Patients with neuropathy activated the ankle extensors significantly earlier during descent, while ankle and knee extensors took significantly longer to reach peak activation (P < 0.05).

"These changes, which are likely caused by altered activations of the extensor muscles, increase the likelihood of instability and may be important contributory factors for the increased risk of falling," the authors write. "Resistance exercise training may be a potential clinical intervention for improving these aspects and thereby potentially reducing fall risk."

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-10-ankle-knee-strength-slower-diabetic.html

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