DocumentCode
1300755
Title
Selective and Graded Recruitment of Cat Hamstring Muscles With Intrafascicular Stimulation
Author
Dowden, Brett R. ; Wilder, Andrew M. ; Hiatt, Scott D. ; Normann, Richard A. ; Brown, Nicholas A T ; Clark, Gregory A.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Bioeng., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Volume
17
Issue
6
fYear
2009
Firstpage
545
Lastpage
552
Abstract
The muscles of the hamstring group can produce different combinations of hip and knee torque. Thus, the ability to activate the different hamstring muscles selectively is of particular importance in eliciting functional movements such as stance and gait in a person with spinal cord injury. We investigated the ability of intrafascicular stimulation of the muscular branch of the sciatic nerve to recruit the feline hamstring muscles in a selective and graded fashion. A Utah Slanted Electrode Array, consisting of 100 penetrating microelectrodes, was implanted into the muscular branch of the sciatic nerve in six cats. Muscle twitches were evoked in the three compartments of biceps femoris (anterior, middle, and posterior), as well as semitendinosus and semimembranosus, using pulse-width modulated constant-voltage pulses. The resultant compound muscle action potentials were recorded using intramuscular fine-wire electrodes. 74% of the electrodes per implant were able to evoke a threshold response in these muscles, and these electrodes were evenly distributed among the instrumented muscles. Of the five muscles instrumented, on average 2.5 could be selectively activated to 90% of maximum EMG, and 3.5 could be selectively activated to 50% of maximum EMG. The muscles were recruited selectively with a mean stimulus dynamic range of 4.14 ?? 5.05 dB between threshold and either spillover to another muscle or a plateau in the response. This selective and graded activation afforded by intrafascicular stimulation of the muscular branch of the sciatic nerve suggests that it is a potentially useful stimulation paradigm for eliciting distinct forces in the hamstring muscle group in motor neuroprosthetic applications.
Keywords
bioelectric phenomena; electromyography; neuromuscular stimulation; prosthetics; EMG; Utah slanted electrode array; anterior biceps femoris compartment; cat hamstring muscle graded recruitment; cat hamstring muscle selective recruitment; evoked muscle twitch; hip torque; intrafascicular stimulation; intramuscular fine wire electrodes; knee torque; middle biceps femoris compartment; motor neuroprosthetic applications; muscle action potential; posteriorbiceps femoris compartment; pulse width modulated constant voltage pulses; sciatic nerve muscular branch; semimembranosus muscle; semitendinosus muscle; stimulation paradigm; threshold response; Feline hamstring muscles; intrafascicular stimulation; motor neuroprosthesis; neuromuscular stimulation; selective activation; Animals; Cats; Electric Stimulation; Hindlimb; Muscle Contraction; Muscle, Skeletal; Recruitment, Neurophysiological; Sciatic Nerve;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2008.2011988
Filename
5208177
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