| Literature DB >> 29605838 |
Lewis J Macgregor1, Angus M Hunter2, Claudio Orizio3, Malcolm M Fairweather4, Massimiliano Ditroilo5.
Abstract
Skeletal muscle operates as a near-constant volume system; as such muscle shortening during contraction is transversely linked to radial deformation. Therefore, to assess contractile properties of skeletal muscle, radial displacement can be evoked and measured. Mechanomyography measures muscle radial displacement and during the last 20 years, tensiomyography has become the most commonly used and widely reported technique among the various methodologies of mechanomyography. Tensiomyography has been demonstrated to reliably measure peak radial displacement during evoked muscle twitch, as well as muscle twitch speed. A number of parameters can be extracted from the tensiomyography displacement/time curve and the most commonly used and reliable appear to be peak radial displacement and contraction time. The latter has been described as a valid non-invasive means of characterising skeletal muscle, based on fibre-type composition. Over recent years, applications of tensiomyography measurement within sport and exercise have appeared, with applications relating to injury, recovery and performance. Within the present review, we evaluate the perceived strengths and weaknesses of tensiomyography with regard to its efficacy within applied sports medicine settings. We also highlight future tensiomyography areas that require further investigation. Therefore, the purpose of this review is to critically examine the existing evidence surrounding tensiomyography as a tool within the field of sports medicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29605838 PMCID: PMC5999145 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-018-0912-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1Typical incremental progression of displacement curves. The increase in curve magnitude is induced by an increase in stimulation amplitude (typically up to 60–100 mA). Peak displacement (Dm) is identified by a plateau in displacement curves, despite increased stimulation amplitude. Peak radial displacement signifies the absolute spatial transverse deformation of the muscle
Fig. 2Parameters extracted from a typical displacement curve; displacement (Dm), contraction time (Tc), delay time (Td), contraction velocity (Vc) [Vc = (90%Dm − 10%Dm)/Tc], sustain time (Ts) and half-relaxation time (Tr)
Summary of the studies correlating contraction time (Tc), one of the tensiomyography parameters, with and slow-twitch muscle fibre type
| Study, year | Comparison | Correlation |
|---|---|---|
| Valenčič et al. [ | Coefficient of determination: Tc vs. type I fibre % | 0.81 |
| Dahmane et al. [ | Pearson’s correlation coefficient: Tc vs. type I fibre % | 0.93 |
| Dahmane et al. [ | Pearson’s correlation coefficient: Tc at 50% of supramaximal response stimulation vs. deep region type I fibre % | 0.90 |
| Šimunič et al. [ | Pearson’s correlation coefficient: Tc vs. MHC-1% | 0.88 |
Tc contraction time, MHC myosin heavy chain
Tensiomyography (TMG) reliability
| Study, year | Muscle | TMG parameters | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dm | Tc | Td | Ts | Tr | |||
| Krizaj et al. [ | Biceps brachii | ICC | 0.98 | 0.97 | 0.94 | 0.89 | 0.86 |
| CV (%) | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Tous-Fajardo et al. [ | Vastus medialis | ICC | 0.97 | 0.92 | 0.86 | 0.96 | 0.77 |
| CV (%) | 4.7 | 3.4 | 2.7 | 14.2 | 2.4 | ||
| Šimunič [ | Vastus lateralis | ICC | 0.99 | 0.98 | 0.89 | 0.96 | 0.89 |
| CV (%) | 1.8 | 1.5 | 4.4 | 7.6 | 4.7 | ||
| Ditroilo et al. [ | Gastrocnemius medialis | ICC | 0.86 to − 0.95 | 0.62 to − 0.92 | 0.56 to − 0.62 | 0.71 to − 0.86 | 0.67 to − 0.79 |
| CV (%) | 8.0 to − 14.8 | 3.8 to − 9.4 | 7.0 to − 9.2 | 5.3 to − 8.2 | 27.8 to − 32.7 | ||
x not measured, TMG tensiomyography, ICC Intra-class correlation coefficient, CV coefficient of variation
Dm displacement, ICC intra-class correlation coefficient, Tc contraction time, Td delay time, Ts sustain time, Tr half-relaxation time, Ts sustain time
Tensiomyography (TMG) response after fatigue
| Study, year | Type of fatigue/EIMD | TMG parameters | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dm | Tc | Vc | ||
| Wiewelhove et al. [ | General | = | = | = |
| Raeder et al. [ | General | ↓ | = | x |
| de Paula Simola et al. [ | General | ↓ | = | ↓ |
| de Paula Simola et al. [ | General | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
| Wiewelhove et al. [ | General | ↓ (trend) | ↑ | x |
| Giovanelli et al. [ | General | ↑ | ↓ | x |
| García-Manso et al. [ | General | ↑ | ↑ | x |
| Macgregor et al. [ | Local | ↓ | x | = |
| García-Manso et al. [ | Local | ↓ | x | ↓ |
| Carrasco et al. [ | Local | ↓ | x | x |
| Hunter et al. [ | EIMD | ↓ | ↑ | x |
↑ increased; ↓ decreased; = unchanged, x not measured. TMG tensiomyography, EIMD exercise induced muscle damage, Dm displacement, EIMD exercise induced muscle damage, Tc contraction time, Vc contraction velocity
| Tensiomyography is a technique that measures radial deformation of skeletal muscle, and in turn its contractile properties, following a stimulated muscle contraction. It resembles the more established mechanomyography process and in fact it should be regarded as a special case of mechanomyography, with some advantages and disadvantages vs. comparable methods. |
| Peak radial displacement and contraction time are the two most common parameters extracted from the displacement/time curve as a result of a single-twitch stimulus. Contraction velocity combines peak radial displacement and contraction time and appears to provide information on twitch rate without being affected by changes in peak radial displacement. |
| In recent years, tensiomyography has been used in a number of applications, such as non-invasive estimation of muscle fibre composition, determination of muscle stiffness, adaptation to training in sporting populations, fatigue, muscle damage and recovery, and bilateral muscle asymmetries |
| Construct validity and reliability of tensiomyography have been established; however, not for specialist populations (elite athletes, clinical patients). The issue of the low level of muscle contraction elicited raises questions over the external validity of the technique for some applications. |