Spasticity is common in individuals with central nervous system (CNS) disease 1 . It causes pain and reduces voluntary movement, which can have a disabling effect on patients and negatively affect rehabilitation outcomes. Lance's widely used definition of spasticity states that spasticity is a motor disorder characterized by a velocity-dependent increase in tonic stretch reflexes (muscle tone) with exaggerated tendon jerks caused by stretch reflex hyperexcitability 2 . A later 1994 definition described "a motor disorder characterized by a velocity-dependent increase in tonic stretch reflexes that results from abnormal intra-spinal processing of primary afferent input" 3 . A definition published in 2005 described spasticity as "disordered sensori-motor control, resulting from an upper motor neuron lesion, presenting as intermittent or sustained involuntary activation of muscles" 4 . There is general agreement that spasticity is caused by adaptations at the spinal cord level distal to the lesion.Changes in spinal pathways may result in spasticity including altered muscle spindle sensitivity, presynaptic inhibition, recurrent (Renshaw) inhibition, Ib inhibition and facilitation, reciprocal Ia inhibition, group II facilitation, cutaneomuscular pathway changes, and post-activation depression 5 . The last item has been an invariant finding in spasticity 1,6,7 , and whether hemiplegic or spinal, this
AbstrActThis study aimed to investigate changes of post-activation depression in two groups of patients with or without spastic equinovarus deformity (SED). Paired and independent t-tests were used to compare post-activation depression within and between the groups, respectively. There was a significant positive correlation between diminished post-activation depression and spasticity severity. The soleus and tibialis anterior (TA) post-activation depression values were significantly decreased on the affected sides of patients with SED compared to those without. In patients without SED, the soleus post-activation depression was significantly decreased on the affected side; however, TA post-activation depression was higher on the affected side. Both the soleus and TA become active, but the onset time may be different. The imbalanced muscle tone between the soleus and TA in the early stage after stroke may be related to equinus deformity.Keywords: stroke, spasticity, spastic equinovarus deformity, hemiplegia, rehabilitation. resumo O principal objetivo deste estudo é a investigação da depressão pós-ativação em pacientes com deformidade equinovarus espástica (DEE). Os pacientes foram divididos em dois grupos. Student-t testes pareados e independentes foram utilizados para comparar a depressão pós-ativação intra-e inter-grupos, respectivamente. Houve uma correlação positiva significativa entre a diminuição da depressão pós-ativação e a gravidade da espasticidade. A depressão pós-ativação dos músculos sóleo e tibial anterior (TA) estavam significativamente diminuídas no lado afetado dos pacientes com SEE em relação aos membros ...