| Literature DB >> 25194883 |
Michael A Trevino, Trent J Herda1, Michael A Cooper.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute paralytic poliomyelitis is caused by the poliovirus and usually results in muscle atrophy and weakness occurring in the lower limbs. Indwelling electromyography has been used frequently to investigate the denervation and innervation characteristics of the affected muscle. Recently developed technology allows the decomposition of the raw surface electromyography signals into the firing instances of single motor units. There is limited information regarding this electromyographic decomposition in clinical populations. In addition, regardless of electromyographic methods, no study has examined muscle activation parameters during repetitive muscle actions in polio patients. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the motor unit firing rates and electromyographic amplitude and center frequency of the vastus lateralis during 20 repetitive isometric muscle actions at 50% maximal voluntary contraction in healthy subjects and one patient that acquired acute paralytic poliomyelitis. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25194883 PMCID: PMC4163171 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-7-611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Motor unit (MU) number, slope, y-intercept and R values for the healthy (HE) and acute paralytic poliomyelitis (PO) participants and repetitive (Rep) contractions (1st, 10th, and 20th) for the mean firing rate (MFR) versus recruitment threshold
| Subject | MUs | Rep# | MFR vs recruitment threshold | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slope | Y-intercept | R | |||
| 1HE | 28 |
| -0.452 | 34.697 | 0.925 |
| 36 |
| -0.356 | 31.632 | 0.947 | |
| 26 |
| -0.381 | 30.078 | 0.922 | |
| 2HE | 41 |
| -0.526 | 30.641 | 0.858 |
| 55 |
| -0.323 | 27.535 | 0.874 | |
| 51 |
| -0.523 | 30.283 | 0.914 | |
| 3HE | 43 |
| -0.439 | 34.926 | 0.862 |
| 50 |
| -0.345 | 28.641 | 0.909 | |
| 53 |
| -0.313 | 27.011 | 0.866 | |
| 1PO | 24 |
| -0.418 | 25.642 | 0.798 |
| 23 |
| -0.261 | 23.478 | 0.755 | |
| 33 |
| -0.412 | 25.257 | 0.836 | |
All relationships were significant (P < 0.05).
Figure 1Plotted normalized electromyography amplitude (EMG RMS) (solid line) and mean power frequency (MPF) (dashed line) values for the healthy (HE) (dark line) and polio (PO) (grey line) participants during the 1st, 10th, and 20th repetitive contraction at 50% maximal voluntary contraction. From repetition 1 to 20, HE had an increase in RMS (26.97%) and a decrease in MPF (11.81%) while the PO had relatively no change in RMS (1.71%) or MPF (0%).
Figure 2Plotted mean firing rate (MFR) versus recruitment threshold (expressed relative to% maximal voluntary contraction [MVC]) relationships from the VL for the healthy (HE) (subject 1 – black circular markers, subject 2 – empty black circular markers, subject 3 – grey circular markers; solid linear regression lines) and polio (PO) participants (grey triangular markers; dashed regression line) during the 1st, 10th, and 20th repetitive contraction at 50% MVC. From repetition 1 to 20, HE experienced a greater decrease in y-intercepts (12.86%) than PO (1.50%).