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Are postural adjustments during reaching related to walking development in typically developing infants and infants at risk of cerebral palsy?

•Postural adjustments during reaching are similar before and after learning to walk.•Direction-specificity increases with age in typically developing infants.•Increase of direction-specificity is delayed in infants at risk of cerebral palsy. In typical development, postural adjustments during reachi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Infant behavior & development 2018-02, Vol.50, p.107-115
Main Authors: van Balen, Lieke C., Boxum, Anke G., Dijkstra, Linze-Jaap, Hamer, Elisa G., Hielkema, Tjitske, Reinders-Messelink, Heleen A., Hadders-Algra, Mijna
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Language:English
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Summary:•Postural adjustments during reaching are similar before and after learning to walk.•Direction-specificity increases with age in typically developing infants.•Increase of direction-specificity is delayed in infants at risk of cerebral palsy. In typical development, postural adjustments during reaching change in the second half of infancy, including increasing rates of direction-specific adjustments. These changes are absent or different in infants at risk of cerebral palsy (CP). To discover whether these changes are related to acquisition of independent walking, we studied postural adjustments during reaching in infants before and after they learned to walk. Ten typically developing (TD) infants and 11 infants at very high risk (VHR) of CP were assessed before and after they learned to walk. Reaching movements were elicited during supported sitting, while surface electromyography was recorded of arm, neck, and trunk muscles. Percentages of direction-specific adjustments (first level of control), and recruitment patterns and anticipatory activation (second level of control) were calculated. In both groups, postural adjustments during reaching were similar before and after acquisition of independent walking. Direction-specificity increased with age in typically developing infants but not in VHR-infants. Increasing age rather than the transition to independent walking is associated with increasing direction-specificity of TD-infants during reaching while sitting, while infants at very high risk of CP show no increase in direction-specificity, suggesting that they gradually grow into a postural deficit.
ISSN:0163-6383
1879-0453
DOI:10.1016/j.infbeh.2017.12.004