| Literature DB >> 24736740 |
Rosan Luijcks1, Hermie J Hermens2, Lonneke Bodar1, Catherine J Vossen3, Jim Van Os4, Richel Lousberg1.
Abstract
Experience of stress may lead to increased electromyography (EMG) activity in specific muscles compared to a non-stressful situation. The main aim of this study was to develop and validate a stress-EMG paradigm in which a single uncontrollable and unpredictable nociceptive stimulus was presented. EMG activity of the trapezius muscles was the response of interest. In addition to linear time effects, non-linear EMG time courses were also examined. Taking into account the hierarchical structure of the dataset, a multilevel random regression model was applied. The stress paradigm, executed in N = 70 subjects, consisted of a 3-minute baseline measurement, a 3-minute pre-stimulus stress period and a 2-minute post-stimulus phase. Subjects were unaware of the precise moment of stimulus delivery and its intensity level. EMG activity during the entire experiment was conform a priori expectations: the pre-stimulus phase showed a significantly higher mean EMG activity level compared to the other two phases, and an immediate EMG response to the stimulus was demonstrated. In addition, the analyses revealed significant non-linear EMG time courses in all three phases. Linear and quadratic EMG time courses were significantly modified by subjective anticipatory stress level, measured just before the start of the stress task. Linking subjective anticipatory stress to EMG stress reactivity revealed that subjects with a high anticipatory stress level responded with more EMG activity during the pre-stimulus stress phase, whereas subjects with a low stress level showed an inverse effect. Results suggest that the stress paradigm presented here is a valid test to quantify individual differences in stress susceptibility. Further studies with this paradigm are required to demonstrate its potential use in mechanistic clinical studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24736740 PMCID: PMC3988146 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0095215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mean EMG activity (in RMS) for baseline period, pre-stimulus period and post-stimulus period.
| Period | Left trapezius EMG activity (mean and SD in log RMS) | Right trapezius EMG activity (mean and SD in log RMS) |
| Baseline | µ = 1.29 [σ = 0.29] | µ = 1.24 [σ = 0.30] |
| Pre-stimulus | µ = 1.38 [σ = 0.30] | µ = 1.34 [σ = 0.31] |
| Post-stimulus | µ = 1.36 [σ = 0.29] | µ = 1.30 [σ = 0.32] |
Figure 1Modeled non-linear EMG activity in trapezius muscle for baseline, pre- and post-stimulus period.
Figure 2Direct stimulus response, showing a time interval of 10 seconds pre-stimulus to 15 seconds post-stimulus.
Figure 3Modeled non-linear time course during the stress task interacted with subjective anticipatory stress for the left trapezius muscle. Low and high stress levels are contrasted.
Figure 4Modeled non-linear time course during the stress task interacted with subjective anticipatory stress for the right trapezius muscle. Low and high stress levels are contrasted.