Specificity of surface EMG recordings for gastrocnemius during upright standing
Journal article, 2017

The relatively large pick-up volume of surface electrodes has for long motivated the concern that muscles other than that of interest may contribute to surface electromyograms (EMGs). Recent findings suggest however the pick-up volume of surface electrodes may be smaller than previously appreciated, possibly leading to the detection of surface EMGs insensitive to muscle activity. Here we combined surface and intramuscular recordings to investigate how comparably action potentials from gastrocnemius and soleus are represented in surface EMGs detected with different inter-electrode distances. We computed the firing instants of motor units identified from intramuscular EMGs detected from gastrocnemius and soleus while five participants stood upright. We used these instants to trigger and average surface EMGs detected from multiple skin regions along gastrocnemius. Results from 66 motor units (whereof 31 from gastrocnemius) revealed the surface-recorded amplitude of soleus action potentials was 6% of that of gastrocnemius and did not decrease for inter-electrode distances smaller than 4 cm. Gastrocnemius action potentials were more likely detected for greater inter-electrode distances and their amplitude increased steeply up to 5 cm inter-electrode distance. These results suggest that reducing inter-electrode distance excessively may result in the detection of surface EMGs insensitive to gastrocnemius activity without substantial attenuation of soleus crosstalk.

Author

Taian Martins Vieira

Polytechnic University of Turin

Alberto Botter

Polytechnic University of Turin

Silvia Muceli

University Medical Center Göttingen

Dario Farina

Imperial College London

Scientific Reports

2045-2322 (ISSN) 20452322 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 1 1-11 13300

Subject Categories

Cell and Molecular Biology

Forest Science

Other Basic Medicine

DOI

10.1038/s41598-017-13369-1

More information

Latest update

4/1/2021 1