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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Marquette University

Series

2015

Electromyography

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Impaired Regulation Post-Stroke Of Motor Unit Firing Behavior During Volitional Relaxation Of Knee Extensor Torque Assessed Using High Density Surface Emg Decomposition, Spencer A. Murphy, Reivian Berrios, P. Andrew Nelson, Francesco Negro, Dario Farina, Brian D. Schmit, Allison Hyngstrom Aug 2015

Impaired Regulation Post-Stroke Of Motor Unit Firing Behavior During Volitional Relaxation Of Knee Extensor Torque Assessed Using High Density Surface Emg Decomposition, Spencer A. Murphy, Reivian Berrios, P. Andrew Nelson, Francesco Negro, Dario Farina, Brian D. Schmit, Allison Hyngstrom

Physical Therapy Faculty Research and Publications

The purpose of this study was to use high density surface EMG recordings to quantify stroke-related abnormalities in motor unit firing behavior during repeated sub-maximal knee extensor contractions. A high density surface EMG system (sEMG) was used to record and extract single motor unit firing behavior in the vastus lateralis muscle of 6 individuals with chronic stroke and 8 controls during repeated sub-maximal isometric knee extension contractions. Paretic motor unit firing rates were increased with subsequent contractions (6.19±0.35 pps vs 7.89±0.66 pps, P


The Effect Of Antagonist Muscle Sensory Input On Force Regulation, Tanya Onushko, Brian D. Schmit, Allison Hyngstrom Jul 2015

The Effect Of Antagonist Muscle Sensory Input On Force Regulation, Tanya Onushko, Brian D. Schmit, Allison Hyngstrom

Physical Therapy Faculty Research and Publications

The purpose of this study was to understand how stretch-related sensory feedback from an antagonist muscle affects agonist muscle output at different contraction levels in healthy adults. Ten young (25.3 ± 2.4 years), healthy subjects performed constant isometric knee flexion contractions (agonist) at 6 torque levels: 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 30%, and 40% of their maximal voluntary contraction. For half of the trials, subjects received patellar tendon taps (antagonist sensory feedback) during the contraction. We compared error in targeted knee flexion torque and hamstring muscle activity, with and without patellar tendon tapping, across the 6 torque levels. At lower torque …