Recording and quantifying sympathetic outflow to muscle and skin in humans: methods, caveats and challenges

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Abstract

The development of microneurography, in which the electrical activity of axons can be recorded via an intrafascicular microelectrode inserted through the skin into a peripheral nerve in awake human participants, has contributed a great deal to our understanding of sensorimotor control and the control of sympathetic outflow to muscle and skin. This review summarises the different approaches to recording muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and skin sympathetic nerve activity (SSNA), together with discussion on the issues that determine the quality of a recording. Various analytical approaches are also described, with a primary emphasis on those developed by the author, aimed at maximizing the information content from recordings of postganglionic sympathetic nerve activity in awake humans.

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Macefield, V. G. (2021, February 1). Recording and quantifying sympathetic outflow to muscle and skin in humans: methods, caveats and challenges. Clinical Autonomic Research. Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10286-020-00700-6

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