Muscle fatigue is a clinically important symptom, often analyzed using electromyography (EMG). We analyzed fatigue reactions of the first dorsal interosseous muscle (FDI) during a maintained contraction at half-maximal force ( 1 โ2-MVC test). EMGs were recorded with large surface electrodes and, sim
Distribution of muscle spindles in the human first dorsal interosseus
โ Scribed by Sahinen, Frederic M. ;Kennedy, William R.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1972
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 481 KB
- Volume
- 173
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-276X
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The problem of accurately locating muscle spindles within the bulk of skeletal muscle has been the major difficulty in histological evaluation of human muscle spindles and in attempts to record their physiological activity. Entire first Dorsal Interossei were taken from fullโterm infants, stained in toto by deCastro's silver technique, serially sectioned or squashed, and individual spindles microdissected for study. A model of the muscle with its extrafusal innervation was constructed and the average number of spindles in five muscles was found to be 47 (range 4Cโ54). The first Dorsal Interosseus muscle is a biโpinnate structure divided by a central tendon which inserts on the proximal first phalanx. The spindles within this muscle are nearly equally distributed between the halves. Most of the spindles are concentrated in two wellโdefined regions, a lateral, more distal spindleโrich region and a medial, more proximal, grouping. Each of these two concentrations consists of approximately oneโthird of the spindles present, the remaining oneโthird being rather uniformly distributed throughout the muscle mass. An idea of the degree of concentration usually seen is illustrated by finding as many as eight spindles present in a 100X field in crossโsection. This density of concentration and apparent consistency of location within the muscle is expected to facilitate procurement of more adequate numbers of spindles at muscle biopsy and to aid the intramuscular recording from human muscle spindles.
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The size of compound motor evoked potentials (cMEPs) to transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex was measured in the relaxed first dorsal interosseous muscle of the nondominant hand (ndFDI) during different levels of voluntary contraction in the homonymous muscle of the dominant hand (d
The present experiment was undertaken to study the change in motor cortex excitability as a function of muscle contraction speed during ramp and step abduction by the index finger. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) of the first dorsal interosseous muscle elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (T