| Literature DB >> 31201609 |
Adam Grabczyński1, Krzysztof Szklanny2, Piotr Wrzeciono3.
Abstract
Electromyography (EMG) is a diagnostic technique allowing for the detection of signals generated by changes in electrical potentials of striated muscles. The application of this technology is becoming an increasingly popular subject of scientific research. With the appearance of new devices retrieving EMG data, novel methods of its processing for various purposes are being developed. One such device is the Myo movement controller, produced by Thalmic Labs (now North). The device has been used for the analysis of muscle activation levels in patients with "tennis elbow" and "golfer's elbow"-conditions of upper limbs which usually result from occupational injuries. The process of their rehabilitation is complex and requires a continuous monitoring of its progress. The data obtained by means of the Myo controller was used for pattern recognition of an injured hand with relation to the healthy one. The study involved examining ten subjects, including five controls. The results indicate that the muscle activation force is considerably lower in injured individuals. The arithmetic mean for the 6 analyzed motions in the injured group is 38.54% lower. The SmartEMG application ( https://www.smartemg.com ) enables the implementation of procedures performed during an examination as well as those involved in the management of the collected recordings. The study produced satisfactory results, which indicates the possibility of using the Myo controller in the treatment of elbow enthesopathy.Entities:
Keywords: Electromyography; Myo movement controller; Rehabilitation; Tennis elbow
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31201609 PMCID: PMC6718364 DOI: 10.1007/s13246-019-00770-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Australas Phys Eng Sci Med ISSN: 0158-9938 Impact factor: 1.430
Patient data
| Patient ID | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | P5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | Golfer’s elbow | Golfer’s and tennis elbow | Tennis elbow | Tennis elbow | Tennis elbow |
| Treatment | None | None | During rehabilitation | None | After corticosteroid injection |
| Sex | Male | Male | Female | Male | Female |
| Pain in the hand | Right | Right | Left | Right | Left |
| Dominant hand | Right | Right | Right | Right | Left |
Motions taken into consideration in research
| Fist grip | Movement of clenched fist in an intermediate position |
| Palm hyperextension with resistance | Movement of palm hyperextension of the hand in intermediate position, without clenching fingers, with resistance in the hand of the examiner |
| Palm flexion with resistance | Movement of palm extension of the hand in intermediate position, without clenching fingers, with resistance in the hand of the examiner |
| Pressuring the hand onto the occiput | Pressuring with fingers of the extended hand to one’s occiput with elbow waved out to the side |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | Pressuring with fingers of the extended hand just over one’s sternum, with elbow waved out to the side |
| Fingers spread with resistance | Extension of fingers with arranging them one to another, and with applied resistance |
Fig. 1RMS approximation of activation strength for each of eight sensors
Fig. 2Overview of all P1 patient movements, WL-RMS method
Comparison of methods based on average results for the control group
| Movements of healthy subjects | RMS (%) | WL (%) | WL RMS (%) | Arithm. mean (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fist grip | 100.35 | 92.29 | 92.50 | 95.05 |
| Palm hyperextension with resistance | 104.41 | 109.27 | 109.10 | 107.59 |
| Palm flexion with resistance | 117.07 | 116.17 | 117.31 | 116.85 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the occiput | 109.91 | 107.19 | 106.64 | 107.91 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | 112.69 | 114.71 | 115.43 | 114.27 |
| Fingers spread with resistance | 105.24 | 101.59 | 102.41 | 103.08 |
| Arithm.mean | 108.28 | 106.87 | 107.23 | 107.46 |
Results for injured patients, the WL-RMS method
| Patient movements | P1 (%) | P2 (%) | P3 (%) | P4 (%) | P5 (%) | Movement arithm. means (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fist grip | 66.71 | 92.29 | 96.64 | 101.88 | 88.94 | 89.29 |
| Palm hyperextension with resistance | 63.72 | 85.22 | 85.51 | 47.09 | 77.82 | 71.87 |
| Palm flexion with resistance | 92.98 | 48.08 | 61.63 | 39.95 | 87.87 | 66.10 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | 28.68 | 61.96 | 44.06 | 61.38 | 86.35 | 56.48 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | 47.03 | 37.05 | 67.37 | 42.78 | 79.59 | 54.76 |
| Fingers spread with resistance | 93.42 | 45.99 | 71.86 | 67.70 | 78.42 | 71.48 |
| Average patient result | 65.42 | 61.77 | 71.18 | 60.13 | 83.16 |
Arithm. mean of the activation strength of the dominant hand 68.33% versus non-dominant
Results for all three methods, the WL-RMS method
| Patient movements | RMS (%) | WL (%) | WL RMS (%) | Arithm.mean (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fist grip | 85.97 | 90.70 | 89.29 | 88.66 |
| Palm hyperextension with resistance | 74.81 | 72.50 | 71.87 | 73.06 |
| Palm flexion with resistance | 68.14 | 68.21 | 66.10 | 67.49 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the occiput | 60.11 | 56.85 | 56.48 | 57.81 |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | 53.50 | 54.78 | 54.76 | 54.35 |
| Fingers spread with resistance | 72.38 | 72.59 | 71.48 | 72.15 |
| Arithm. mean | 69.15 | 69.27 | 68.33 | 68.92 |
Difference between the results of control group and patients
| Movements | Control group (%) | Patients (%) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fist grip | 95.05 | 88.66 | 6.39% points |
| Palm hyperextension with resistance | 107.59 | 73.06 | 34.53% points |
| Palm flexion with resistance | 116.85 | 67.49 | 49.36% points |
| Pressuring the hand onto the occiput | 107.91 | 57.81 | 50.10% points |
| Pressuring the hand onto the sternum | 114.27 | 54.35 | 59.92% points |
| Fingers spread with resistance | 103.08 | 72.15 | 30.93% points |
| Arithm. mean | 107.46 | 68.92 | 38.54% points |