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Muscle fatigue increases beta-band coherence between the firing times of simultaneously active motor units in the first dorsal interosseous muscle
Alternative Title
Muscle fatigue increases intramuscular motor unit coherence
Date Issued
2016-06-01
Date Available
2017-06-01T01:00:12Z
Abstract
Synchronization between the firing times of simultaneously active motor units (MUs) is generally assumed to increase during fatiguing contractions. To date, however, estimates of MU synchronization have relied on indirect measures, derived from surface electromyographic (EMG) interference signals. This study used intramuscular coherence to investigate the correlation between MU discharges in the first dorsal interosseous muscle during and immediately following a submaximal fatiguing contraction, and after rest. Coherence between composite MU spike trains, derived from decomposed surface EMG, were examined in the delta (14 Hz), alpha (812 Hz), beta (1530 Hz), and gamma (3060 Hz) frequency band ranges. A significant increase in MU coherence was observed in the delta, alpha, and beta frequency bands postfatigue. In addition, wavelet coherence revealed a tendency for delta-, alpha-, and beta-band coherence to increase during the fatiguing contraction, with subjects exhibiting low initial coherence values displaying the greatest relative increase. This was accompanied by an increase in MU short-term synchronization and a decline in mean firing rate of the majority of MUs detected during the sustained contraction. A model of the motoneuron pool and surface EMG was used to investigate factors influencing the coherence estimate. Simulation results indicated that changes in motoneuron inhibition and firing rates alone could not directly account for increased beta-band coherence postfatigue. The observed increase is, therefore, more likely to arise from an increase in the strength of correlated inputs to MUs as the muscle fatigues.
Sponsorship
Irish Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
American Psychological Society
Journal
Journal of Neurophysiology
Volume
115
Issue
6
Start Page
2830
End Page
2839
Copyright (Published Version)
2016 The American Psychological Society
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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insight_publication.pdf
Size
1.27 MB
Format
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