4.4 Article

INTERSESSION RELIABILITY OF THE ELECTROMYOGRAPHIC SIGNAL DURING INCREMENTAL CYCLE ERGOMETRY: QUADRICEPS FEMORIS

Journal

MUSCLE & NERVE
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 937-946

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/mus.22211

Keywords

consistency; muscle fatigue; muscle physiology; neuromuscular fatigue; neuromuscular response; polynomial regression

Funding

  1. Institute of Gerontology
  2. Office of the Vice President for Research, Wayne State University

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Introduction: The purposes of this investigation were to determine the: (1) reproducibility of the patterns of responses for electromyographic (EMG) amplitude and mean power frequency (MPF); and (2) intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of the EMG amplitude and MPF during three incremental cycle ergometer tests separated by 48 hours. Methods: Ten men performed incremental cycle ergometry tests to exhaustion on three separate occasions. Surface EMG signals were recorded simultaneously from the three superficial quadriceps muscles at each trial. Results: Polynomial regression indicated that, for >95% of the cases, the best-fit model was the same at each trial for EMG amplitude but not for EMG MPF. The ICC values were high for EMG amplitude but low for EMG MPF. Conclusions: These results indicate that EMG amplitude is a reliable measure of motor unit activation strategy during incremental cycle ergometry, whereas the EMG MPF was unreliable. Muscle Nerve 44: 937-946, 2011

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