Twitch potentia induced by two different modalities of neuromuscular electrical stimulation: implications for motor unit recruitment.


Autoria(s): Dias Da Silva, Sarah Regina; Neyroud, Daria; Maffiuletti, Nicola A.; Gondin, Julien; Place, Nicolas
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

INTRODUCTION: We tested the hypothesis that twitch potentiation would be greater following conventional (CONV) neuromuscular electrical stimulation (50-µs pulse width and 25-Hz frequency) compared with wide-pulse high-frequency (WPHF) neuromuscular electrical stimulation (1-ms, 100-Hz) and voluntary (VOL) contractions, because of specificities in motor unit recruitment (random in CONV vs. random and orderly in WPHF vs. orderly in VOL). METHODS: A single twitch was evoked by means of tibial nerve stimulation before and 2 s after CONV, WPHF, and VOL conditioning contractions of the plantar flexors (intensity: 10% maximal voluntary contraction; duration: 10 s) in 13 young healthy subjects. RESULTS: Peak twitch increased (P<0.05) after CONV (+4.5±4.0%) and WPHF (+3.3±5.9%), with no difference between the 2 modalities, whereas no changes were observed after VOL (+0.8±2.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that presumed differences in motor unit recruitment between WPHF and CONV do not seem to influence twitch potentiation results.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_405F5857F365

isbn:1097-4598 (Electronic)

pmid:24917022

doi:10.1002/mus.24315

isiid:000349677300015

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Muscle and Nerve, vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 412-418

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article