Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength

It is important to accurately estimate the electromyogram (EMG)/force relationship of triceps surae (TS) muscle for detecting strength deficit of tibalis anterior (TA) muscle. In literature, the protocol for recording EMG and force of dorsiflexion have been described, and the necessity for immobiliz...

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Main Authors: Ariba Siddiqi, Sridhar P. Arjunan, Dinesh Kumar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:MethodsX
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016115000096
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spelling doaj-14201cf5a43b44629758f4468e27c3782020-11-25T01:46:10ZengElsevierMethodsX2215-01612015-01-012C10711110.1016/j.mex.2015.02.006Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strengthAriba SiddiqiSridhar P. ArjunanDinesh KumarIt is important to accurately estimate the electromyogram (EMG)/force relationship of triceps surae (TS) muscle for detecting strength deficit of tibalis anterior (TA) muscle. In literature, the protocol for recording EMG and force of dorsiflexion have been described, and the necessity for immobilizing the ankle has been explained. However, there is a significant variability of the results among researchers even though they report the fixation of the ankle. We have determined that toe extension can cause significant variation in the dorsiflexion force and EMG of TS and this can occur despite following the current guidelines which require immobilizing the ankle. The results also show that there was a large increase in the variability of the force and the RMS of EMG of TS when the toes were not strapped compared with when they were strapped. Thus, with the current guidelines, where there are no instructions regarding the necessity of strapping the toes, the EMG/force relationship of TS could be incorrect and give an inaccurate assessment of the dorsiflexor TA strength. In summary, • Current methodology to estimate the dorsiflexor TA strength with respect to the TS activity, emphasizing on ankle immobilization is insufficient to prevent large variability in the measurements. • Toe extension during dorsiflexion was found to be one source of variability in estimating the TA strength. • It is recommended that guidelines for recording force and EMG from TA and TS muscles should require the strapping of the toes along with the need for immobilizing the ankle.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016115000096Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ariba Siddiqi
Sridhar P. Arjunan
Dinesh Kumar
spellingShingle Ariba Siddiqi
Sridhar P. Arjunan
Dinesh Kumar
Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
MethodsX
Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol
author_facet Ariba Siddiqi
Sridhar P. Arjunan
Dinesh Kumar
author_sort Ariba Siddiqi
title Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
title_short Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
title_full Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
title_fullStr Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
title_full_unstemmed Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
title_sort improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol for assessment of tibialis anterior muscle strength
publisher Elsevier
series MethodsX
issn 2215-0161
publishDate 2015-01-01
description It is important to accurately estimate the electromyogram (EMG)/force relationship of triceps surae (TS) muscle for detecting strength deficit of tibalis anterior (TA) muscle. In literature, the protocol for recording EMG and force of dorsiflexion have been described, and the necessity for immobilizing the ankle has been explained. However, there is a significant variability of the results among researchers even though they report the fixation of the ankle. We have determined that toe extension can cause significant variation in the dorsiflexion force and EMG of TS and this can occur despite following the current guidelines which require immobilizing the ankle. The results also show that there was a large increase in the variability of the force and the RMS of EMG of TS when the toes were not strapped compared with when they were strapped. Thus, with the current guidelines, where there are no instructions regarding the necessity of strapping the toes, the EMG/force relationship of TS could be incorrect and give an inaccurate assessment of the dorsiflexor TA strength. In summary, • Current methodology to estimate the dorsiflexor TA strength with respect to the TS activity, emphasizing on ankle immobilization is insufficient to prevent large variability in the measurements. • Toe extension during dorsiflexion was found to be one source of variability in estimating the TA strength. • It is recommended that guidelines for recording force and EMG from TA and TS muscles should require the strapping of the toes along with the need for immobilizing the ankle.
topic Improvement of isometric dorsiflexion protocol
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016115000096
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