Muscle Network Connectivity Study in Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Patients

Author:

Junquera-Godoy Isabel1ORCID,Martinez-De-Juan José Luís1ORCID,González-Lorente Gemma1,Carot-Sierra José Miguel2ORCID,Gomis-Tena Julio1ORCID,Saiz Javier1ORCID,García-Blasco Silvia3ORCID,Pertusa-Mazón Isabel3ORCID,Soler-Climent Esther4ORCID,Prats-Boluda Gema1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Investigación e Innovación en Bioingeniería (Ci2B), Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV), 46022 Valencia, Spain

2. Departamento de Estadística e Investigación Operativa Aplicadas y Calidad, Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV), 46022 Valencia, Spain

3. Servicio de Rehabilitación, Departamento Salud Elche Hospital General de FISABIO, 03203 Elche, Spain

4. Área de Investigación en Enfermería-Fisioterapia, Departamento Salud Elche Hospital General de FISABIO, 03203 Elche, Spain

Abstract

Diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) is a prevalent complication of chronic diabetes mellitus and has a significant impact on quality of life. DPN typically manifests itself as a symmetrical, length-dependent sensorimotor polyneuropathy with severe effects on gait. Surface electromyography (sEMG) is a valuable low-cost tool for assessing muscle activation patterns and precise identification of abnormalities. For the present study, we used information theory methods, such as cross-correlation (CC), normalized mutual information (NMI), conditional granger causality (CG-Causality), and transfer entropy (TE), to evaluate muscle network connectivity in three population groups: 33 controls (healthy volunteers, CT), 10 diabetic patients with a low risk of DPN (LW), and 17 moderate/high risk patients (MH). The results obtained indicated significant alterations in the intermuscular coupling mechanisms due to diabetes and DPN, with the TE group showing the best performance in detecting differences. The data revealed a significant increase in information transfer and muscle connectivity in the LW group over the CT group, while the MH group obtained significantly lower values for these metrics than the other two groups. These findings highlight the sEMG coupling metrics’ potential to reveal neuromuscular mechanisms that could aid the development of targeted rehabilitation strategies and help monitor DPN patients.

Funder

Agència Valenciana de la Innovació

POLISABIO

Publisher

MDPI AG

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