4.6 Article

Effect of elbow joint angles on electromyographic activity versus force relationships of synergistic muscles of the triceps brachii

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252644

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Grants [17H02142]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H02142] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This study compared the EMG-force relationships of the medial, lateral, and long heads of the triceps brachii at different elbow joint angles. The results showed that relatively smaller neuromuscular activation was required when the elbow joint angle was extended, but neuromuscular activation levels and relative force levels were matched in all three synergists when the elbow joint angle was at 90 degrees or a more flexed position.
The electromyographic (EMG) activity and force relationship, i.e. EMG-force relationship, is a valuable indicator of the degree of the neuromuscular activation during isometric force production. However, there is minimal information available regarding the EMG-force relationship of individual triceps brachii (TB) muscles at different elbow joint angles. This study aimed to compare the EMG-force relationships of the medial (TB-Med), lateral (TB-Lat), and long heads (TB-Long) of the TB. 7 men and 10 women performed force matching isometric tasks at 20%, 40%, 60%, and 80%maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) at 60 degrees, 90 degrees, and 120 degrees of extension. During the submaximal force matching tasks, the surface EMG signals of the TB-Med, TB-Lat, and TB-Long were recorded and calculated the root mean square (RMS). RMS of each force level were then normalized by RMS at 100%MVC. For the TB-Med, ultrasonography was used to determine the superficial region of the muscle that faced the skin surface to minimize cross-talk. The joint angle was monitored using an electrogoniometer. The elbow extension force, elbow joint angle, and surface EMG signals were simultaneously sampled at 2 kHz and stored on a personal computer. The RMS did not significantly differ between the three muscles, except between the TB-Med and TB-Lat during 20%MVC at 60 degrees. The RMS during force levels of >= 60%MVC at 120 degrees was significantly lower than that at 60 degrees or 90 degrees for each muscle. The sum of difference, which represents the difference in RMS from the identical line, did not significantly differ in any of the assessed muscles in the present study. This suggests that a relatively smaller neuromuscular activation could be required when the elbow joint angle was extended. However, neuromuscular activation levels and relative force levels were matched in all three TB synergists when the elbow joint angle was at 90 degrees or a more flexed position.

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