Accurate and representative decoding of the neural drive to muscles in humans with multi-channel intramuscular thin-film electrodes

2015 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Accurate and representative decoding of the neural drive to muscles in humans with multi-channel intramuscular thin-film electrodes​
Muceli, S.; Poppendieck, W.; Negro, F.; Yoshida, K.; Hoffmann, K. P.; Butler, J. E. & Gandevia, S. C. et al.​ (2015) 
The Journal of Physiology593(17) pp. 3789​-3804​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1113/JP270902 

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Authors
Muceli, Silvia; Poppendieck, Wigand; Negro, Francesco; Yoshida, Ken; Hoffmann, Klaus P.; Butler, Jane E.; Gandevia, Simon C.; Farina, Dario
Abstract
We describe the design, fabrication and testing of a novel multi-channel thin-film electrode for detection of the output of motoneurones in vivo and in humans, through muscle signals. The structure includes a linear array of 16 detection sites that can sample intramuscular electromyographic activity from the entire muscle cross-section. The structure was tested in two superficial muscles (the abductor digiti minimi (ADM) and the tibialis anterior (TA)) and a deep muscle (the genioglossus (GG)) during contractions at various forces. Moreover, surface electromyogram (EMG) signals were concurrently detected from the TA muscle with a grid of 64 electrodes. Surface and intramuscular signals were decomposed into the constituent motor unit (MU) action potential trains. With the intramuscular electrode, up to 31 MUs were identified from the ADM muscle during an isometric contraction at 15% of the maximal force (MVC) and 50 MUs were identified for a 30% MVC contraction of TA. The new electrode detects different sources from a surface EMG system, as only one MU spike train was found to be common in the decomposition of the intramuscular and surface signals acquired from the TA. The system also allowed access to the GG muscle, which cannot be analysed with surface EMG, with successful identification of MU activity. With respect to classic detection systems, the presented thin-film structure enables recording from large populations of active MUs of deep and superficial muscles and thus can provide a faithful representation of the neural drive sent to a muscle.
Issue Date
2015
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley-blackwell
Journal
The Journal of Physiology 
ISSN
1469-7793; 0022-3751

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