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Effect of reference electrode position on the compound muscle action potential (CMAP) onset latency

✍ Scribed by Gulapar Phongsamart; Jacqueline J. Wertsch; Mohammed Ferdjallah; John C. King; D. Terrence Foster


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
113 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Compound muscle action potential (CMAP) onset latency is interpreted to reflect the arrival time at the muscle of impulses in the fastest‐conducting motor nerve fiber. However, we have observed that the position of the reference or indifferent electrode (E2) affects CMAP onset latency. Motor nerve conduction studies (NCS) of the median, ulnar, and deep ulnar motor (DUM) nerves on 20 normal hands were performed using both traditional bipolar and experimental monopolar (referenced to the contralateral hand) montages. As the position of E2 was altered, the CMAP onset latency varied 0.1–0.5 ms for the median NCS, 0.1–0.3 ms for the ulnar NCS, and 0.1–1.5 ms for the DUM NCS. This study demonstrates that E2 recorded potentials are significant and vary with positioning, affecting motor onset latency. This has implications both for reference values and the physiologic interpretation of the CMAP waveform. Β© 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Muscle Nerve 25: 000–000, 2002


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