EMG Changes in Human Thenar Motor Units With Force Potentiation and Fatigue

2006 ◽  
Vol 95 (3) ◽  
pp. 1518-1526 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. K. Thomas ◽  
R. S. Johansson ◽  
B. Bigland-Ritchie

Few studies have analyzed activity-induced changes in EMG activity in individual human motor units. We studied the changes in human thenar motor unit EMG that accompany the potentiation of twitch force and fatigue of tetanic force. Single motor unit EMG and force were recorded in healthy subjects in response to selective stimulation of their motor axons within the median nerve just above the elbow. Twitches were recorded before and after a series of pulse trains delivered at frequencies that varied between 5 and 100 Hz. This stimulation induced significant increases in EMG amplitude, duration, and area. However, in relative terms, all of these EMG changes were substantially smaller than the potentiation of twitch force. Another 2 min of stimulation (13 pulses at 40 Hz each second) induced additional potentiation of EMG amplitude, duration, and area, but the tetanic force from every unit declined. Thus activity-induced changes in human thenar motor unit EMG do not indicate the alterations in force or vice versa. These data suggest that different processes underlie the changes in EMG and force that occur during human thenar motor unit activity.

1995 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 901-913 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Nordstrom ◽  
R. M. Enoka ◽  
R. M. Reinking ◽  
R. C. Callister ◽  
D. G. Stuart

Six weeks of limb immobilization of a healthy muscle (cat tibialis posterior) at a short length resulted in a significant reduction of mean fiber area for all fiber types (I, 71% of control; IIa, 77% of control; IIb, 79% of control), whereas fiber type proportions were unchanged. For motor units, there was a reduction in peak tetanic force (type slow > fast fatigue resistant > fast fatigable); an increase in the twitch-to-tetanus ratio for fast fatigue-resistant and slow units; and no effect on the twitch force, twitch time course, or fatigability. The reduction in peak force was greater than expected because of fiber atrophy in slow units. Immobilization had a minimal effect on muscle spindle afferent (Ia and spindle group II) responses to a ramp-and-hold stretch of the passive muscle. Tendon organ (Ib) afferents had an increased responsiveness to stretch after immobilization but only when the muscle was stretched from a short resting length. However, immobilization reduced the modulation of muscle afferent discharge in response to tetanic contractions of single motor units. The decline in responsiveness of spindles was a result of the reduced tetanic force of motor units. In contrast, tendon organs in immobilized muscle were twice as likely to convey no information on the contraction of a single motor unit and were more likely to be unloaded, suggesting that immobilization caused the functional denervation of some muscle fibers. Thus the responses of muscle spindles and tendon organs in immobilized muscle reflected atrophic changes in extrafusal fibers but did not provide evidence for substantial disturbance of receptor function.


2009 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Altenburg ◽  
A. de Haan ◽  
P. W. L. Verdijk ◽  
W. van Mechelen ◽  
C. J. de Ruiter

Single motor unit electromyographic (EMG) activity of the knee extensors was investigated at different knee angles with subjects ( n = 10) exerting the same absolute submaximal isometric torque at each angle. Measurements were made over a 20° range around the optimum angle for torque production (AngleTmax) and, where feasible, over a wider range (50°). Forty-six vastus lateralis (VL) motor units were recorded at 20.7 ± 17.9 %maximum voluntary contraction (%MVC) together with the rectified surface EMG (rsEMG) of the superficial VL muscle. Due to the lower maximal torque capacity at positions more flexed and extended than AngleTmax, single motor unit recruitment thresholds were expected to decrease and discharge rates were expected to increase at angles above and below AngleTmax. Unexpectedly, the recruitment threshold was higher ( P < 0.05) at knee angles 10° more extended (43.7 ± 22.2 N·m) and not different ( P > 0.05) at knee angles 10° more flexed (35.2 ± 17.9 N·m) compared with recruitment threshold at AngleTmax (41.8 ± 21.4 N·m). Also, unexpectedly the discharge rates were similar ( P > 0.05) at the three angles: 11.6 ± 2.2, 11.6 ± 2.1, and 12.3 ± 2.1 Hz. Similar angle independent discharge rates were also found for 12 units ( n = 5; 7.4 ± 5.4 %MVC) studied over the wider (50°) range, while recruitment threshold only decreased at more flexed angles. In conclusion, the similar recruitment threshold and discharge behavior of VL motor units during submaximal isometric torque production suggests that net motor unit activation did not change very much along the ascending limb of the knee-angle torque relationship. Several factors such as length-dependent twitch potentiation, which may contribute to this unexpected aspect of motor control, are discussed.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise Smith ◽  
Tao Zhong ◽  
Parveen Bawa

When ramp-and-hold currents are injected into a motoneuron of an anesthetized cat, the motoneuron responds with a high initial firing rate (dynamic phase), which then adapts to a lower steady-state firing rate. The firing rates during the dynamic and the steady-state phases are linearly related to the rate of change and the magnitude of the injected current, respectively. In human subjects, where inputs to the motoneurons are not accessible, force parameters are used to describe motoneuron behaviour. Population responses of human motoneurons, measured in terms of gross electromyographic (EMG) activity, increase linearly with the magnitude and the rate of change of force. No study has attempted to examine the question of linearity of single motor units during the dynamic as well as the steady-state phases. The following study recorded single motor unit and EMG activities simultaneously from the flexor carpi radialis muscle in human subjects completing ramp-and-hold force trajectories. Although the results confirmed the linear relationship between EMG activities and the rate and magnitude of the force, a nonlinear activity pattern was observed between the single motor unit firing and the force parameters, suggesting that recruitment must be responsible for the linear behaviour of EMG activity. Comparisons of different background activity levels on the firing patterns of a given motor unit, as well as comparisons of two simultaneously recorded units, further supported nonlinear response patterns of single motor units.Key words: human, motoneurons, motor units, nonlinearity, force trajectory, repetitive firing.


1991 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 1043-1061 ◽  
Author(s):  
F L Gielen ◽  
R N Friedman ◽  
J P Wikswo

Recent advances in the technology of recording magnetic fields associated with electric current flow in biological tissues have provided a means of examining action currents that is more direct and possibly more accurate than conventional electrical recording. Magnetic recordings are relatively insensitive to muscle movement, and, because the recording probes are not directly connected to the tissue, distortions of the data due to changes in the electrochemical interface between the probes and the tissue are eliminated. In vivo magnetic recordings of action currents of rat common peroneal nerve and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle were obtained by a new magnetic probe and amplifier system that operates within the physiological temperature range. The magnetically recorded waveforms were compared with those obtained simultaneously by conventional, extracellular recording techniques. We used the amplitude of EDL twitch force (an index of stimulus strength) generated in response to graded stimulation of the common peroneal nerve to enable us to compare the amplitudes of magnetically recorded nerve and muscle compound action currents (NCACs and MCACs, respectively) with the amplitudes of electrically recorded nerve compound action potentials (NCAPs). High, positive correlations to stimulus strength were found for NCACs (r = 0.998), MCACs (r = 0.974), and NCAPs (r = 0.998). We also computed the correlations of EDL single motor unit twitch force with magnetically recorded single motor unit compound action currents (SMUCACs) and electrically recorded single motor unit compound action potentials (SMUCAPs) obtained with both a ring electrode and a straight wire serving as a point electrode. Only the SMUCACs had a relatively strong positive correlation (r = 0.768) with EDL twitch force. Correlations for ring and wire electrode-recorded SMUCAPs were 0.565 and -0.366, respectively. This study adds a relatively direct examination of action currents to the characterization of the normal biophysical properties of peripheral nerve, muscle, and muscle single motor units.


2014 ◽  
Vol 112 (7) ◽  
pp. 1685-1691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Dakin ◽  
Brian H. Dalton ◽  
Billy L. Luu ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Blouin

Rectification of surface electromyographic (EMG) recordings prior to their correlation with other signals is a widely used form of preprocessing. Recently this practice has come into question, elevating the subject of EMG rectification to a topic of much debate. Proponents for rectifying suggest it accentuates the EMG spike timing information, whereas opponents indicate it is unnecessary and its nonlinear distortion of data is potentially destructive. Here we examine the necessity of rectification on the extraction of muscle responses, but for the first time using a known oscillatory input to the muscle in the form of electrical vestibular stimulation. Participants were exposed to sinusoidal vestibular stimuli while surface and intramuscular EMG were recorded from the left medial gastrocnemius. We compared the unrectified and rectified surface EMG to single motor units to determine which method best identified stimulus-EMG coherence and phase at the single-motor unit level. Surface EMG modulation at the stimulus frequency was obvious in the unrectified surface EMG. However, this modulation was not identified by the fast Fourier transform, and therefore stimulus coherence with the unrectified EMG signal failed to capture this covariance. Both the rectified surface EMG and single motor units displayed significant coherence over the entire stimulus bandwidth (1–20 Hz). Furthermore, the stimulus-phase relationship for the rectified EMG and motor units shared a moderate correlation ( r = 0.56). These data indicate that rectification of surface EMG is a necessary step to extract EMG envelope modulation due to motor unit entrainment to a known stimulus.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 1917-1926 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. C. Sieck ◽  
M. Fournier

Fatigue-related changes in the waveform and root-mean-square (rms) values of evoked motor unit electromyographic (EMG) responses were studied in the right sternocostal region of the cat diaphragm. Motor units were isolated by microdissection and stimulation of C5 ventral root filaments and then classified as fast-twitch fatigable (FF), fast-twitch fatigue intermediate (FInt), fast-twitch fatigue resistant (FR), or slow-twitch (S) based on standard physiological criteria. The evoked EMG responses of S and FR units showed very little change during the fatigue test. The evoked EMG waveform and rms values of FF and FInt units displayed variable changes during the fatigue test. When changes were observed, they typically included a prolongation of the EMG waveform, a decrease in peak amplitude, and a decrease in rms value. The changes in EMG amplitude and rms values were not correlated. In more fatigable units, the decrease in force during the fatigue test generally exceeded the decrease in EMG rms values. Changes in the evoked force and EMG responses of multiple units innervated by C5 or C6 ventral roots were also examined during the fatigue test. The decrease in diaphragm force during the fatigue test closely matched the force decline predicted by the proportionate contribution of different motor unit types. However, the observed reduction in diaphragm EMG rms values during the fatigue test exceeded that predicted based on the aggregate contribution of different motor unit types. It was concluded that changes in EMG do not reflect the extent of diaphragm fatigue.


1987 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 1730-1745 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. C. Bodine ◽  
R. R. Roy ◽  
E. Eldred ◽  
V. R. Edgerton

In 11 tibialis anterior muscles of the cat, a single motor unit was characterized physiologically and subsequently depleted of its glycogen through repetitive stimulation of an isolated ventral root filament. Muscle cross sections were stained for glycogen using a periodic acid-Schiff reaction, and single-fiber optical densities were determined to identify those fibers belonging to the stimulated motor unit. Innervation ratios were determined by counting the total number of muscle fibers in a motor unit in sections taken through several levels of the muscle. The average innervation ratios for the fast, fatigueable (FF) and fast, fatigue-resistant (FR) units were similar. However, the slow units (S) contained 61% fewer fibers than the fast units (FF and FR). Muscle fibers belonging to S and FR units were similar in cross-sectional area, whereas fibers belonging to FF units were significantly larger than fibers belonging to either S or FR units. Additionally, muscle fibers innervated by a single motoneuron varied by two- to eightfold in cross-sectional area. Specific tensions, based on total cross-sectional area determined by summing the areas of all muscle fibers of each unit, showed a modest difference between fast and slow units, the means being 23.5 and 17.2 N X cm-2, respectively. Variations in maximum tension among units could be explained principally by innervation ratio, although fiber cross-sectional area and specific tension did contribute to differences between unit types.


1961 ◽  
Vol 200 (4) ◽  
pp. 689-693
Author(s):  
Simeon Locke

The effect of a tetanus on the motor unit of the gastrocnemius of the rat has been studied before and after administration of blocking agents. Post-tetanic potentiation of action potential of the single motor unit occurs following depression of response by curare or decamethonium. Increased amplitude of unit potential results from partial resynchronization of subunit potential contributions which had been desynchronized by the differential effect of the blocking agent on subunit latency. Decline of unit potential subsequent to post-tetanic potentiation results from desynchronization of component contributions as had been observed with initial administration of blocking agent. The occurrence of these events in a single motor unit indicates that they take place at the nerve terminal or subterminal portion of the unit.


1996 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 2428-2435 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Mateika ◽  
E. Essif ◽  
R. F. Fregosi

Mateika, J. H., E. Essif, and R. F. Fregosi. Effect of hypoxia on abdominal motor unit activities in spontaneously breathing cats. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(6): 2428–2435, 1996.—These experiments were designed to examine the behavior of external oblique motor units in spontaneously breathing cats during hypoxia and to estimate the contribution of recruitment and rate coding to changes in the integrated external oblique electromyogram (iEMG). Motor unit activities in the external oblique muscle were identified while the cats expired against a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 1–2.5 cmH2O. After localization of unit activity, PEEP was removed, and recordings were made continuously for 3–4 min during hyperoxia, normoxia, and hypoxia. A total of 35 single motor unit activities were recorded from 10 cats. At each level of fractional concentration of end-tidal O2, the motor unit activity was characterized by an abrupt increase in mean discharge frequency, at ∼30% of expiratory time, which then continued to increase gradually or remained constant before declining abruptly at the end of expiration. The transition from hyperoxia to normoxia and hypoxia was accompanied by an increase in the number of active motor units (16 of 35, 20 of 35, and 29 of 35, respectively) and by an increase in the mean discharge frequency of those units active during hyperoxia. The changes in motor unit activity recorded during hypoxia were accompanied by a significant increase in the average peak amplitude of the abdominal iEMG. Linear regression analysis revealed that motor unit rate coding was responsible for close to 60% of the increase in peak iEMG amplitude. The changes in abdominal motor unit activity and the external oblique iEMG that occurred during hypoxia were abolished if the arterial [Formula: see text] was allowed to fall. We conclude that external oblique motor units are activated during the latter two-thirds of expiration and that rate coding and recruitment contribute almost equally to the increase in expiratory muscle activity that occurs with hypoxia. In addition, the excitation of abdominal motor units during hypoxia is critically dependent on changes in CO2 and/or tidal volume.


2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna M. Taylor ◽  
Julie W. Steege ◽  
Roger M. Enoka

The purpose of the study was to quantify the effect of motor-unit synchronization on the spike-triggered average forces of a population of motor units. Muscle force was simulated by defining mechanical and activation characteristics of the motor units, specifying motor neuron discharge times, and imposing various levels of motor-unit synchronization. The model comprised 120 motor units. Simulations were performed for motor units 5–120 to compare the spike-triggered average responses in the presence and absence of motor-unit synchronization with the motor-unit twitch characteristics defined in the model. To synchronize motor-unit activity, selected motor-unit discharge times were adjusted; this kept the number of action potentials constant across the three levels of synchrony for each motor unit. Because there was some overlap of motor-unit twitches even at minimal discharge rates, the simulations indicated that spike-triggered averaging underestimates the twitch force of all motor units and the contraction time of motor units with contraction times longer than 49 ms. Although motor-unit synchronization increased the estimated twitch force and decreased the estimated contraction time of all motor units, spike-triggered average force changed systematically with the level of synchrony in motor units 59–120 (upper 90% of the range of twitch forces). However, the reduction in contraction time was similar for moderate and high synchrony. In conclusion, spike-triggered averaging appears to provide a biased estimate of the distribution of twitch properties for a population of motor units because twitch fusion causes an underestimation of twitch force for slow units and motor-unit synchronization causes an overestimation of force for fast motor units.


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