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  5. Changes in motor unit behavior following isometric fatigue of the first dorsal interosseous muscle
 
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Changes in motor unit behavior following isometric fatigue of the first dorsal interosseous muscle

Author(s)
McManus, Lara M.  
Hu, Xiaogang  
Rymer, William  
Lowery, Madeleine M.  
Suresh, Nina  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8435
Date Issued
2015-05-01
Date Available
2017-04-18T16:36:24Z
Abstract
The neuromuscular strategies employed to compensate for fatigue-induced muscle force deficits are not clearly understood. This study utilizes surface electromyography (sEMG) together with recordings of a population of individual motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) to investigate potential compensatory alterations in motor unit (MU) behavior immediately following a sustained fatiguing contraction and after a recovery period. EMG activity was recorded during abduction of the first dorsal interosseous in 12 subjects at 20% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC), before and directly after a 30% MVC fatiguing contraction to task failure, with additional 20% MVC contractions following a 10-min rest. The amplitude, duration and mean firing rate (MFR) of MUAPs extracted with a sEMG decomposition system were analyzed, together with sEMG root-mean-square (RMS) amplitude and median frequency (MPF). MUAP duration and amplitude increased immediately postfatigue and were correlated with changes to sEMG MPF and RMS, respectively. After 10 min, MUAP duration and sEMG MPF recovered to prefatigue values but MUAP amplitude and sEMG RMS remained elevated. MU MFR and recruitment thresholds decreased postfatigue and recovered following rest. The increase in MUAP and sEMG amplitude likely reflects recruitment of larger MUs, while recruitment compression is an additional compensatory strategy directly postfatigue. Recovery of MU MFR in parallel with MUAP duration suggests a possible role for metabolically sensitive afferents in MFR depression postfatigue. This study provides insight into fatigue-induced neuromuscular changes by examining the properties of a large population of concurrently recorded single MUs and outlines possible compensatory strategies involving alterations in MU recruitment and MFR.
Sponsorship
Irish Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
American Psychological Society
Journal
Journal of Neurophysiology
Volume
113
Issue
9
Start Page
3186
End Page
3196
Copyright (Published Version)
2015 the American Physiological Society
Subjects

Motor unit action pot...

Surface electromyogra...

Isometric fatigue

DOI
10.1152/jn.00146.2015
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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JNeurophysiol_LaraMcManus_04_03_Clean.pdf

Size

693.15 KB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

0bf039f397e9c674ec6917e740d73815

Owning collection
Electrical and Electronic Engineering Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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