Recruitment stability in masseter motor units during isometric voluntary contractions
✍ Scribed by Sheila D. Scutter; Kemal S. Türker
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 330 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-639X
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✦ Synopsis
Recruitment of single motor units (SMUs) of the masseter muscle was studied using macro representation (MacroRep) as the indicator of motor unit size. When subjects followed a slow isometric force ramp, units were usually recruited in order of MacroRep size. However, pooling the data from repeated ramps in the same subject resulted in a weak relationship between MacroRep size and force recruitment threshold, probably due to marked variations in the relative contributions of the jaw muscles, and varying levels of cocontraction, in the development of total bite force in each ramp. The force recruitment thresholds of individual SMUs showed marked variability, but recruitment threshold stability was improved when expressed as a percentage of maximum surface electromyographic (SEMG) activity in the ipsilateral masseter. Therefore the SEMG recruitment threshold was concluded to be a more stable and accurate indicator of the SMU's position in the recruitment hierarchy in a given muscle. It was concluded that SMUs in masseter are recruited according to the size principle, and that when investigating recruitment in jaw muscles, SEMG recruitment threshold should be used in preference to force recruitment threshold.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The purpose of this study was to contrast the discharge patterns of the same motor units during movements and during isometric contractions that were produced with comparable torque-time characteristics. Subjects performed elbow flexion and extension movements with predetermined acceleration charact
against external support. In both cases a permanent increase of the muscle force during the entire contraction is required. We have not found a ''triphasic'' pattern of muscle activation even during very fast movements. The ''triphasic'' pattern was not evident during eccentric movements either (see