Motor control after spinal cord injury: Assessment using surface EMG

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Abstract

The brain motor control assessment (BMCA) protocol is a comprehensive multichannel surface EMG recording used to characterize motor control features in persons with upper motor neuron dysfunction. Key information is contained in the overall temporal pattern of motor unit activity, observed in the EMG (RMS) envelope. In paralysis, a rudimentary form of suprasegmental control of tonic and phasic reflexes can be demonstrated. EMG patterns evoked by voluntary and passive maneuvers and by volitional modulation of reflex responses reveal features of motor control not apparent in the clinical examination. Such subclinical findings may explain paradoxically different responses in apparently similar SCI subjects, and may be used to monitor spontaneous or induced changes. The recording protocol, examples of EMG patterns, and their prevalence in 40 spinal cord injured (SCI) subjects are presented, and compared with 5 healthy subjects.

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Sherwood, A. M., McKay, W. B., & Dimitrijević, M. R. (1996). Motor control after spinal cord injury: Assessment using surface EMG. Muscle and Nerve, 19(8), 966–979. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-4598(199608)19:8<966::AID-MUS5>3.0.CO;2-6

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