학술논문

Identification of Motor Unit Firings in H-Reflex of Soleus Muscle Recorded by High-Density Surface Electromyography
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering IEEE Trans. Neural Syst. Rehabil. Eng. Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on. 31:119-129 2023
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Robotics and Control Systems
Signal Processing and Analysis
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Firing
Muscles
Electromyography
Electrodes
Recording
Synchronization
Standards
H-reflex
motor unit identification
high-density surface EMG
decomposition
Language
ISSN
1534-4320
1558-0210
Abstract
We developed and tested the methodology that supports the identification of individual motor unit (MU) firings from the Hoffman (or H) reflex recorded by surface high-density EMG (HD-EMG). Synthetic HD-EMG signals were constructed from simulated 10% to 90% of maximum voluntary contraction (MVC), followed by 100 simulated H-reflexes. In each H-reflex the MU firings were normally distributed with mean latency of 20 ms and standard deviations (SDLAT) ranging from 0.1 to 1.3 ms. Experimental H-reflexes were recorded from the soleus muscle of 12 men (33.6 ± 5.8 years) using HD-EMG array of ${5}\times {13}$ surface electrodes. Participants performed 15 to 20 s long voluntary plantarflexions with contraction levels ranging from 10% to 70% MVC. Afterwards, at least 60 H-reflexes were electrically elicited at three levels of background muscle activity: rest, 10% and 20% MVC. HD-EMGs of voluntary contractions were decomposed using the Convolution Kernel Compensation method to estimate the MU filters. When applied to HD-EMG signals with synthetic H reflexes, MU filters demonstrated high MU identification accuracy, especially for $\text {SD}_{\text {LAT}}>{0.3}$ ms. When applied to experimental H-reflex recordings, the MU filters identified 14.1 ± 12.1, 18.2 ± 12.1 and 20.8 ± 8.7 firings per H-reflex, with individual MU firing latencies of 35.9 ± 3.3, 35.1 ± 3.0 and 34.6 ± 3.3 ms for rest, 10% and 20% MVC background muscle activity, respectively. Standard deviation of MU latencies across experimental H-reflexes were 1.0 ± 0.8, 1.3 ± 1.1 and 1.5 ± 1.2 ms, in agreement with intramuscular EMG studies.