Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm

This study investigated the chronological activation sequence of multiple joint movements of the hemiparetic arm in patients with central hemiparesis compared to healthy test subjects.Twelve patients with central hemiparesis and eight healthy control subjects were studied. First, in rapid abduction...

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Main Author: C. Mucha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2004-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Physiotherapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/186
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spelling doaj-ba1a550cf2e34cb3b6d8b7b62cef52292020-11-24T22:28:20ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Physiotherapy0379-61752410-82192004-01-01602212610.4102/sajp.v60i2.186186Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic armC. MuchaThis study investigated the chronological activation sequence of multiple joint movements of the hemiparetic arm in patients with central hemiparesis compared to healthy test subjects.Twelve patients with central hemiparesis and eight healthy control subjects were studied. First, in rapid abduction movement of the upper limb, the electromyographic activities of the middle part of the deltoid muscle, the brachial biceps muscle and the extensor muscles of the fingers, were registered. Second, in rapid flexion of the arm, the electromyographic activities of the ventral part of the deltoid muscle, the brachial biceps muscle and the superficial flexor muscles of the fingers, were measured. From the EMG data registered, activation duration, activation latency and the innervation sequence were determined and compared between the patient group and the control group. In the patient group, a significant prolongation of the activation duration was shown only in abduction. However, the activation latency was significantly prolonged in both movements compared to healthy test subjects. In the innervation sequences, a simultaneous activation was most frequently shown in healthy subjects. In healthy subjects, the deltoid muscle also usually functioned as leading muscle, whereas there was sometimes a shift distally to the brachial biceps muscle in the hemiparetic patients. The speed of rapid multiple joint movements in hemiparetic extremities seems to be unaffected in certain movements (anteversion), in others (abduction) it seems to be significantly reduced. This, as well as the fact that the activation latency is significantly longer in the hemiparetic limbs should be taken into consideration when choosing rehabilitation exercises.https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/186hemiparetic armpolyarticular movementchronological activation sequence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. Mucha
spellingShingle C. Mucha
Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
South African Journal of Physiotherapy
hemiparetic arm
polyarticular movement
chronological activation sequence
author_facet C. Mucha
author_sort C. Mucha
title Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
title_short Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
title_full Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
title_fullStr Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
title_full_unstemmed Sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
title_sort sequential muscle activation in the hemiparetic arm
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Physiotherapy
issn 0379-6175
2410-8219
publishDate 2004-01-01
description This study investigated the chronological activation sequence of multiple joint movements of the hemiparetic arm in patients with central hemiparesis compared to healthy test subjects.Twelve patients with central hemiparesis and eight healthy control subjects were studied. First, in rapid abduction movement of the upper limb, the electromyographic activities of the middle part of the deltoid muscle, the brachial biceps muscle and the extensor muscles of the fingers, were registered. Second, in rapid flexion of the arm, the electromyographic activities of the ventral part of the deltoid muscle, the brachial biceps muscle and the superficial flexor muscles of the fingers, were measured. From the EMG data registered, activation duration, activation latency and the innervation sequence were determined and compared between the patient group and the control group. In the patient group, a significant prolongation of the activation duration was shown only in abduction. However, the activation latency was significantly prolonged in both movements compared to healthy test subjects. In the innervation sequences, a simultaneous activation was most frequently shown in healthy subjects. In healthy subjects, the deltoid muscle also usually functioned as leading muscle, whereas there was sometimes a shift distally to the brachial biceps muscle in the hemiparetic patients. The speed of rapid multiple joint movements in hemiparetic extremities seems to be unaffected in certain movements (anteversion), in others (abduction) it seems to be significantly reduced. This, as well as the fact that the activation latency is significantly longer in the hemiparetic limbs should be taken into consideration when choosing rehabilitation exercises.
topic hemiparetic arm
polyarticular movement
chronological activation sequence
url https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/186
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