Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential

<p>Abstract</p> <p>In this paper, the acute changes in the compound motor action potential (CMAP) during mechanical stretch were studied in hamster sciatic nerve and compared to the changes that occur during compression.</p> <p>In response to stretch, the nerve physical...

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Main Authors: Wolfe Jacob, Baylor Kelly, Stecker Mark M, Stevenson Matthew
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georg Thieme Verlag KG 2011-08-01
Series:Journal of Brachial Plexus and Peripheral Nerve Injury
Online Access:http://www.jbppni.com/content/6/1/4
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spelling doaj-d0b2cb09a9c64a2597b000c8a36b2f482020-11-25T03:51:11ZengGeorg Thieme Verlag KGJournal of Brachial Plexus and Peripheral Nerve Injury1749-72212011-08-0161410.1186/1749-7221-6-4Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potentialWolfe JacobBaylor KellyStecker Mark MStevenson Matthew<p>Abstract</p> <p>In this paper, the acute changes in the compound motor action potential (CMAP) during mechanical stretch were studied in hamster sciatic nerve and compared to the changes that occur during compression.</p> <p>In response to stretch, the nerve physically broke when a mean force of 331 gm (3.3 N) was applied while the CMAP disappeared at an average stretch force of 73 gm (0.73 N). There were 5 primary measures of the CMAP used to describe the changes during the experiment: the normalized peak to peak amplitude, the normalized area under the curve (AUC), the normalized duration, the normalized velocity and the normalized velocity corrected for the additional path length the impulses travel when the nerve is stretched. Each of these measures was shown to contain information not available in the others.</p> <p>During stretch, the earliest change is a reduction in conduction velocity followed at higher stretch forces by declines in the amplitude of the CMAP. This is associated with the appearance of spontaneous EMG activity. With stretch forces < 40 gm (0.40 N), there is evidence of increased excitability since the corrected velocities increase above baseline values. In addition, there is a remarkable increase in the peak to peak amplitude of the CMAP after recovery from stretch < 40 gm, often to 20% above baseline.</p> <p>Multiple means of predicting when a change in the CMAP suggests a significant stretch are discussed and it is clear that a multifactorial approach using both velocity and amplitude parameters is important. In the case of pure compression, it is only the amplitude of the CMAP that is critical in predicting which changes in the CMAP are associated with significant compression.</p> http://www.jbppni.com/content/6/1/4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wolfe Jacob
Baylor Kelly
Stecker Mark M
Stevenson Matthew
spellingShingle Wolfe Jacob
Baylor Kelly
Stecker Mark M
Stevenson Matthew
Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
Journal of Brachial Plexus and Peripheral Nerve Injury
author_facet Wolfe Jacob
Baylor Kelly
Stecker Mark M
Stevenson Matthew
author_sort Wolfe Jacob
title Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
title_short Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
title_full Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
title_fullStr Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
title_full_unstemmed Acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
title_sort acute nerve stretch and the compound motor action potential
publisher Georg Thieme Verlag KG
series Journal of Brachial Plexus and Peripheral Nerve Injury
issn 1749-7221
publishDate 2011-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>In this paper, the acute changes in the compound motor action potential (CMAP) during mechanical stretch were studied in hamster sciatic nerve and compared to the changes that occur during compression.</p> <p>In response to stretch, the nerve physically broke when a mean force of 331 gm (3.3 N) was applied while the CMAP disappeared at an average stretch force of 73 gm (0.73 N). There were 5 primary measures of the CMAP used to describe the changes during the experiment: the normalized peak to peak amplitude, the normalized area under the curve (AUC), the normalized duration, the normalized velocity and the normalized velocity corrected for the additional path length the impulses travel when the nerve is stretched. Each of these measures was shown to contain information not available in the others.</p> <p>During stretch, the earliest change is a reduction in conduction velocity followed at higher stretch forces by declines in the amplitude of the CMAP. This is associated with the appearance of spontaneous EMG activity. With stretch forces < 40 gm (0.40 N), there is evidence of increased excitability since the corrected velocities increase above baseline values. In addition, there is a remarkable increase in the peak to peak amplitude of the CMAP after recovery from stretch < 40 gm, often to 20% above baseline.</p> <p>Multiple means of predicting when a change in the CMAP suggests a significant stretch are discussed and it is clear that a multifactorial approach using both velocity and amplitude parameters is important. In the case of pure compression, it is only the amplitude of the CMAP that is critical in predicting which changes in the CMAP are associated with significant compression.</p>
url http://www.jbppni.com/content/6/1/4
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