An electromyographic assessment pilot study on the reliability of the forearm muscles during multi-planar maximum voluntary contraction grip and wrist articulation in young males

Journal article


Hunter, Henry H., Sorbie, Graeme G., Grace, Fergal M., Gu, Yaodong, Lam, Wing-Kai, Baker, Julien S., Dutheil, Frédéric, Dias, Tilak and Ugbolue, Ukadike C.. (2022). An electromyographic assessment pilot study on the reliability of the forearm muscles during multi-planar maximum voluntary contraction grip and wrist articulation in young males. Technology and Health Care. 30(3), pp. 713-724. https://doi.org/10.3233/THC-212822
AuthorsHunter, Henry H., Sorbie, Graeme G., Grace, Fergal M., Gu, Yaodong, Lam, Wing-Kai, Baker, Julien S., Dutheil, Frédéric, Dias, Tilak and Ugbolue, Ukadike C.
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Electromyographic systems are widely used in scientific and clinical practice. The reproducibility and reliability of these measures are crucial when conducting scientific research and collecting experimental data.

OBJECTIVE: To test the reliability of surface electromyography signals from both the Flexor Digitorum Superficialis (FDS) and Extensor Carpi Radialis Brevis (ECRB) muscles of both the left and right arms during an individual, static multi-planar maximum voluntary contraction handgrip task using the Myon 320 system (Myon AG, Switzerland).

METHODS: Eight right-handed male participants performed two maximal handgrip tests in five separate wrist positions using both hands. Muscle activity was recorded from both forearms. Reliability was measured using the Standard Error of Measurement (SEM), Coefficient of Variation (CV) and Intra-class correlation coefficients. Wrist joint position correlations within and between the FDS and ECRB muscle activities were also analysed.

RESULTS: Absolute reliability was shown across all positions for both hands with CV and SEM recorded at below 10%. The output measures indicate that the Myon 320 system (Myon AG, Switzerland) produces good to fair reliability when assessing forearm muscle activity. Correlations in the left FDS muscles were negative. Correlations between the left ECRB and left FDS muscles were variable but positive between the right ECRB and right FDS muscles.

CONCLUSIONS: The data sets retrieved from all participants were reliably evaluated. Wrist position correlations within and between the FDS and ECRB muscles may have been influenced by hand dominance. The findings demonstrate that the methods and systems outlined in this study can be used reliably in future research.

KeywordsEMG; consistency; hand grip; FDS; ECRB
Year01 Jan 2022
JournalTechnology and Health Care
Journal citation30 (3), pp. 713-724
PublisherIOS Press BV
ISSN0928-7329
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3233/THC-212822
Web address (URL)https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.3233/THC-212822
Open accessPublished as non-open access
Research or scholarlyResearch
Page range713-724
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
PrintMay 2022
Publication process dates
AcceptedMay 2022
Deposited17 Feb 2025
Additional information

© 2022 – IOS Press. All rights reserved.

Place of publicationNetherlands
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