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Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking

BACKGROUND: Optimized temporal and spatial activation of the gluteal intermuscular functional unit is essential for steady gait and minimized joint loading. RESEARCH QUESTION: To analyze the temporal relationship between spatially resolved surface EMG (SEMG) of the gluteal region and the correspondi...

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Autores principales: Anders, Christoph, Sander, Klaus, Layher, Frank, Patenge, Steffen, Kinne, Raimund W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8153502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34038412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251758
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author Anders, Christoph
Sander, Klaus
Layher, Frank
Patenge, Steffen
Kinne, Raimund W.
author_facet Anders, Christoph
Sander, Klaus
Layher, Frank
Patenge, Steffen
Kinne, Raimund W.
author_sort Anders, Christoph
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Optimized temporal and spatial activation of the gluteal intermuscular functional unit is essential for steady gait and minimized joint loading. RESEARCH QUESTION: To analyze the temporal relationship between spatially resolved surface EMG (SEMG) of the gluteal region and the corresponding ground reaction force (GRF). METHODS: Healthy adults (29♀; 25♂; age 62.6±7.0 years) walked at their self-selected slow, normal, and fast walking speeds on a 10 m walkway (ten trials/speed). Bilateral paired eight-electrode strips were horizontally aligned at mid-distance of the vertical line between greater trochanter and iliac crest. Concerning the ventral to dorsal direction, the center of each strip was placed on this vertical line. Initially, these signals were monopolarly sampled, but eight vertically oriented bipolar channels covering the whole gluteal region from ventral to dorsal (P1 to P8) were subsequently calculated by subtracting the signals of the corresponding electrodes of each electrode strip for both sides of the body. Three vertical bipolar channels represented the tensor fasciae latae (TFL; P2), gluteus medius (Gmed, SENIAM position; average of P4 and P5), and gluteus maximus muscles (Gmax; P7). To determine the interval between SEMG and corresponding GRF, the time delay (TD) between the respective first amplitude peaks (F1) in SEMG and vertical GRF curves was calculated. RESULTS: Throughout the grand averaged SEMG curves, the absolute amplitudes significantly differed among the three walking speeds at all electrode positions, with the amplitude of the F1 peak significantly increasing with increasing speed. In addition, when normalized to slow, the relative SEMG amplitude differences at the individual electrode positions showed an impressively homogeneous pattern. In both vertical GRF and all electrode SEMGs, the F1 peak occurred significantly earlier with increasing speed. Also, the TD between SEMG and vertical GRF F1 peaks significantly decreased with increasing speed. Concerning spatial activation, the TD between the respective F1 peaks in the SEMG and vertical GRF was significantly shorter for the ventral TFL position than the dorsal Gmed and Gmax positions, showing that the SEMG F1 peak during this initial phase of the gait cycle occurred earlier in the dorsal positions, and thus implying that the occurrence of the SEMG F1 peak proceeded from dorsal to ventral. SIGNIFICANCE: Tightly regulated spatial and temporal activation of the gluteal intermuscular functional unit, which includes both speed- and position-dependent mechanisms, seems to be an essential requirement for a functionally optimized, steady gait.
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spelling pubmed-81535022021-06-09 Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking Anders, Christoph Sander, Klaus Layher, Frank Patenge, Steffen Kinne, Raimund W. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Optimized temporal and spatial activation of the gluteal intermuscular functional unit is essential for steady gait and minimized joint loading. RESEARCH QUESTION: To analyze the temporal relationship between spatially resolved surface EMG (SEMG) of the gluteal region and the corresponding ground reaction force (GRF). METHODS: Healthy adults (29♀; 25♂; age 62.6±7.0 years) walked at their self-selected slow, normal, and fast walking speeds on a 10 m walkway (ten trials/speed). Bilateral paired eight-electrode strips were horizontally aligned at mid-distance of the vertical line between greater trochanter and iliac crest. Concerning the ventral to dorsal direction, the center of each strip was placed on this vertical line. Initially, these signals were monopolarly sampled, but eight vertically oriented bipolar channels covering the whole gluteal region from ventral to dorsal (P1 to P8) were subsequently calculated by subtracting the signals of the corresponding electrodes of each electrode strip for both sides of the body. Three vertical bipolar channels represented the tensor fasciae latae (TFL; P2), gluteus medius (Gmed, SENIAM position; average of P4 and P5), and gluteus maximus muscles (Gmax; P7). To determine the interval between SEMG and corresponding GRF, the time delay (TD) between the respective first amplitude peaks (F1) in SEMG and vertical GRF curves was calculated. RESULTS: Throughout the grand averaged SEMG curves, the absolute amplitudes significantly differed among the three walking speeds at all electrode positions, with the amplitude of the F1 peak significantly increasing with increasing speed. In addition, when normalized to slow, the relative SEMG amplitude differences at the individual electrode positions showed an impressively homogeneous pattern. In both vertical GRF and all electrode SEMGs, the F1 peak occurred significantly earlier with increasing speed. Also, the TD between SEMG and vertical GRF F1 peaks significantly decreased with increasing speed. Concerning spatial activation, the TD between the respective F1 peaks in the SEMG and vertical GRF was significantly shorter for the ventral TFL position than the dorsal Gmed and Gmax positions, showing that the SEMG F1 peak during this initial phase of the gait cycle occurred earlier in the dorsal positions, and thus implying that the occurrence of the SEMG F1 peak proceeded from dorsal to ventral. SIGNIFICANCE: Tightly regulated spatial and temporal activation of the gluteal intermuscular functional unit, which includes both speed- and position-dependent mechanisms, seems to be an essential requirement for a functionally optimized, steady gait. Public Library of Science 2021-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8153502/ /pubmed/34038412 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251758 Text en © 2021 Anders et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Anders, Christoph
Sander, Klaus
Layher, Frank
Patenge, Steffen
Kinne, Raimund W.
Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title_full Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title_fullStr Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title_full_unstemmed Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title_short Temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle Surface EMG activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
title_sort temporal and spatial relationship between gluteal muscle surface emg activity and the vertical component of the ground reaction force during walking
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8153502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34038412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251758
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