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The reproducibility of test contractions for calibration of electromyographic measurements

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Summary

The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the reproducibility of electromyographic (EMG) measurements and specifically to test a calibration procedure with submaximal test contractions. Bipolar surface electrodes (20 mm fixed distance) were repositioned by a tracing sheet on both trapezius muscles, halfway between acromion and processus prominens. Submaximal test contractions were performed by keeping both arms straight abducted 90° and forward flexed 10° for 15-s periods. The arm position could be precisely reproduced in the frontal plane, but deviated forwards by 4° in the horizontal plane, where the sensitivity of the EMG response to arm position was lowest. The electrodes were repositioned within a radius of 3 mm with a probability of 90%. Large deviations in the EMG response were found within this radius and a significant depression of the EMG response was recorded over the middle part of the muscle (the innervation zone?). This change in sensitivity of the EMG response with electrode position occurred in parallel for the test and maximal contractions. The total coefficient of variation was estimated to be 23% for recurrent EMG measurements using the calibration procedure described.

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Veiersted, K.B. The reproducibility of test contractions for calibration of electromyographic measurements. Europ. J. Appl. Physiol. 62, 91–98 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00626762

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00626762

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