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Investigation of motor unit recruitment during stimulated contractions of tibialis anterior muscle
Authors:L Mesin  E Merlo  R Merletti  C Orizio
Institution:1. Department of Mechanical, Energy, and Materials Engineering, University of Extremadura, Avda. de Elvas s/n, 06006 Badajoz, Spain;2. Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa, Avda. Rovisco Pais 1, 1049-001 Lisboa, Portugal;1. Department of Research, New York Chiropractic College, Seneca Falls, NY, United States;2. Nimmo® Educational Foundation, Pittsburgh, PA, United States;3. Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, United States
Abstract:This work investigated motor unit (MU) recruitment during transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TES) of the tibialis anterior (TA) muscle, using experimental and simulated data. Surface electromyogram (EMG) and torque were measured during electrically-elicited contractions at different current intensities, on eight healthy subjects.EMG detected during stimulation (M-wave) was simulated selecting the elicited MUs on the basis of: (a) the simulated current density distribution in the territory of each MU and (b) the excitation threshold characteristic of the MU. Exerted force was simulated by adding the contribution of each of the elicited MUs. The effects of different fat layer thickness (between 2 and 8 mm), different distributions of excitation thresholds (random excitation threshold, higher threshold for larger MUs or smaller MUs), and different MU distributions within the muscle (random distribution, larger MU deeper in the muscle, smaller MU deeper) on EMG variables and torque were tested.Increase of the current intensity led to a first rapid increase of experimental M-wave amplitude, followed by a plateau. Further increases of the stimulation current determined an increase of the exerted force, without relevant changes of the M-wave. Similar results were obtained in simulations.Rate of change of conduction velocity (CV) and leading coefficient of the second order polynomial interpolating the force vs. stimulation level curve were estimated as a function of increasing current amplitudes. Experimental data showed an increase of estimated CV with increasing levels of the stimulation current (for all subjects) and a positive leading coefficient of force vs. stimulation current curve (for five of eight subjects). Simulations matched the experimental results only when larger MUs were preferably located deeper in the TA muscle (in line with a histochemical study). Marginal effect of MU excitation thresholds was observed, suggesting that MUs closer to the stimulation electrode are recruited first during TES regardless of their excitability.
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