| Literature DB >> 18534030 |
Gunter P Siegmund1, Jean-Sébastien Blouin, Mark G Carpenter, John R Brault, J Timothy Inglis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The cervical multifidus muscles insert onto the lower cervical facet capsular ligaments and the cervical facet joints are the source of pain in some chronic whiplash patients. Reflex activation of the multifidus muscle during a whiplash exposure could potentially contribute to injuring the facet capsular ligament. Our goal was to determine the onset latency and activation amplitude of the cervical multifidus muscles to a simulated rear-end collision and a loud acoustic stimuli.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18534030 PMCID: PMC2440751 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-9-80
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1MRI and ultrasound images showing wire insertion. a) axial slice of a magnetic resonance scan at C4 level showing desired insertion path to the multifidus muscle and b) ultrasound image showing actual needle path and tip during insertion into the multifidus muscle.
Figure 2Experimental setup. Schematic and photograph showing a) the head clamp and force plate used for the isometric contractions, b) the sled configuration, and c) the sled acceleration pulses. Three superimposed pulses are shown to illustrate the repeatability of the pulse. The dashed line shows a vehicle-to-vehicle collision pulse with a speed change of 8 km/h recorded during earlier experiments [19].
Figure 3Exemplar data. Exemplar data for two subjects showing the raw electromyographic activity and kinematics parameters observed during a) the sled perturbation and b) the loud acoustic tone. The vertical scale bars are aligned with time t = 0 ms. EMG are presented in arbitrary units that are the same for both stimuli.
Mean ± SD and median (range) of muscle onset times, normalized muscle amplitudes, kinematic amplitudes and time of peak kinematics.
| Sled | Startle | |
| EMG onset time (ms) | ||
| C4 level | 129 ± 60 | 123 ± 64 |
| 140 (34 – 191) | 105 (58 – 222) | |
| C6 level | 232 ± 175 | 182 ± 120 |
| 194 (66 – 571) | 126 (60 – 417) | |
| EMG amplitude (%MVC) | ||
| C4 level | 137 ± 168 a | 136 ± 123 a |
| 107 (12 – 532) | 80 (39 – 337) | |
| C6 level | 40 ± 25 | 57 ± 53 a |
| 36 (9 – 77) | 28 (15 – 150) | |
| Kinematics | ||
| Head accel (m/s2) | 9.7 ± 3.3 | 1.9 ± 1.0 |
| 10.1 (5.6 – 15.2) | 1.6 (0.5 – 3.5) | |
| Head extension (°) | 15.6 ± 5.6 | 1.9 ± 3.1 a |
| 12.6 (10.0 – 25.9) | 0.5 (0.1 – 8.8) | |
| Retraction (mm) | 18.4 ± 6.9 | 4.3 ± 2.4 a |
| 19.4 (8.7 – 31.3) | 5.2 (1.0 – 6.6) | |
| Time to peak kinematics (ms) | ||
| Head accel | 123 ± 11 | 272 ± 168 a |
| 122 (106 – 145) | 215 (124 – 581) | |
| Head extension | 208 ± 51 a | 557 ± 200 |
| 190 (170 – 330) | 510 (290 – 770) | |
| Retraction | 173 ± 48 | 373 ± 187 |
| 160 (110 – 240) | 330 (130 – 710) | |
a non-normally distributed, Shapiro-Wilks p < 0.05
Catastrophic failure loads of isolated facet capsular ligaments as a function of elongation rate.
| Study | N Gender | Elongation rate (mm/s) | Failure load (N) |
| Winkelstein et al. (1999) [43] | 12M | 0.0083 | 84 ± 37 |
| Siegmund et al. (2001) [7] | 13F | 0.0083 | 94 ± 31 |
| Myklebust et al. (1988) [44] | 2–5* | 10 | 108 ± 40** |
| Winkelstein et al. (1999) [43] | 12M | 100 | 136 ± 60 |
| Ivancic et al. (2007) [45] | 32 | 723 | 220 ± 84 |
| Shim et al. (2006) [46] | 15M | 9600 – 13,600 | 260 ± 112 |
* N at each cervical level from C2/3 to C7/T1 between 2 and 5
** average of the means and standard deviations at cervical level from C2/3 to C7/T1; also values reported here are half those reported by Myklebust et al (1988) because left and right ligaments were tested simultaneously.