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Fatigue associated EMG behavior of the first dorsal interosseous and adductor pollicis muscles in different groups of subjects

✍ Scribed by Inge Zijdewind; Daniel Kernell


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
969 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

We have studied the fatigue‐associated behavior of surface EMG in two histochemically different muscles of the hand: first dorsal interosseous (FDI) and adductor pollicis (AP; relatively more type I fibers in AP than in FDI). During a fatigue test evoked by electrical stimulation of the ulnar nerve, the mean amplitudes of compound muscle action potentials (M‐waves) exhibited the same overall pattern for both muscles: a rapid phase of potentiation followed by a gradual decline. However, if the group of subjects was subdivided on the basis of hand length, significant differences emerged in the reactions of AP: in large hands, no fatigue‐associated M‐wave decline was seen, whereas in small hands a distinct decline was observed. A possible explanation for this phenomenon might be the presence of a greater amount of EMG contamination from other muscles in smaller hands. In the supposedly “cleaner” recordings from larger hands, significant differences between FDI and AP were observed with regard to their fatigue‐associated EMG reactions (M‐wave depression in FDI but not in AP). The direction of these differences was in accordance with expectations on the basis of known differences in histochemical fiber type composition. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.


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✍ Inge Zijdewind; Machiel J. Zwarts; Daniel Kernell 📂 Article 📅 1999 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 150 KB 👁 2 views

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 ⁄2-MVC test). EMGs were recorded with large surface electrodes and, sim