Literature DB >> 15700188

Intramuscular pressure, tissue oxygenation and EMG fatigue measured during isometric fatigue-inducing contraction of the multifidus muscle.

M Kramer1, C Dehner, E Hartwig, H U Völker, J Sterk, M Elbel, E Weikert, H Gerngross, L Kinzl, C Willy.   

Abstract

Simultaneous measurement of intramuscular pressure (IMP), tissue oxygen partial pressure (pO(2)) and EMG fatigue parameters in the multifidus muscle during a fatigue-inducing sustained muscular contraction. The study investigated the following hypotheses: (1) Increases in IMP result in tissue hypoxia; (2) Tissue hypoxia is responsible for loss of function in the musculature. The nutrient supply to muscle during muscle contraction is still not fully understood. It is assumed that muscle contraction causes increased tissue pressure resulting in compromised perfusion and tissue hypoxia. This tissue hypoxia, in turn, leads to muscle fatigue and therefore to loss of function. To the authors' knowledge, no study has addressed IMP, pO(2) and EMG fatigue parameters in the same muscle to gain a deeper sight into muscle perfusion during contraction. As back muscles need to have a constant muscular tension to maintain trunk stability during stance and locomotion, muscle fatigue due to prolonged contraction-induced hypoxia could be an explanation for low back pain. Sixteen healthy subjects performed an isometric muscular contraction exercise at 60% of maximum force until the point of localized muscular fatigue. During this exercise, the individual changes of IMP, pO(2) and the median frequency (MF) of the surface EMG signal of the multifidus muscle were recorded simultaneously. In 12 subjects with a documented increase in intramuscular pressure, only five showed a decrease in tissue oxygen partial pressure, while this parameter remained unchanged in six other subjects and even increased in one. A fall in tissue pO(2) was associated with a drop in MF in only five subjects, while there was no correlation between these parameters in the other 11 subjects. To summarize, an increase in IMP correlated with a decrease in pO(2) and a drop in MF in only five out of 16 subjects. High intramuscular pressure values are not always associated with a hypoxia in muscle tissue. Tissue hypoxia is not automatically associated with a median frequency shift in the EMG signal's power spectrum.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15700188      PMCID: PMC3489241          DOI: 10.1007/s00586-004-0857-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Spine J        ISSN: 0940-6719            Impact factor:   3.134


  42 in total

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  5 in total

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Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2010-09-30       Impact factor: 3.078

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4.  Low Back Pain in Patients with Lumbar Spinal Stenosis-Hemodynamic and electrophysiological study of the lumbar multifidus muscles.

Authors:  Yoshihito Sakai; Sadayuki Ito; Tetsuro Hida; Kenyu Ito; Hiroyuki Koshimizu; Atsushi Harada
Journal:  Spine Surg Relat Res       Date:  2017-12-20

5.  Determining Physiological and Psychological Predictors of Time to Task Failure on a Virtual Reality Sørensen Test in Participants With and Without Recurrent Low Back Pain: Exploratory Study.

Authors:  Megan E Applegate; Christopher R France; David W Russ; Samuel T Leitkam; James S Thomas
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  5 in total

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