Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3044410 Clinical Neurophysiology 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Reliable assessment of quadriceps strength, endurance and fatigue can be obtained over a single session in patients with neuromuscular diseases by using the quadriceps intermittent fatigue (QIF) test.•Femoral nerve magnetic stimulation exhibits limitations due to insufficient stimulation intensity in ∼30% of patients with fascioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) and in all patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT).•Patients with FSHD and CMT exhibit similar endurance and neuromuscular fatigue compared to healthy controls during standardized isolated quadriceps contractions.

ObjectivesTo (i) evaluate the feasibility and the reliability of a test assessing quadriceps strength, endurance and fatigue in patients with fascioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), (ii) compare quadriceps function between patients and healthy controls.MethodsControls performed the test once and patients twice on two separate visits. It involved progressive sets of 10 isometric contractions each followed by neuromuscular assessments with FNMS.ResultsVolitional assessment of muscle strength, endurance and fatigue appeared to be reliable in FSHD and CMT patients. Supramaximal FNMS was achieved in ∼70% of FSHD patients and in no CMT patients. In FSHD patients, Femoral nerve magnetic stimulation (FNMS) provided reliable assessment of central (typical error as a coefficient of variation (CVTE) < 8% for voluntary activation) and peripheral (CVTE < 10% and intraclass coefficient correlation >0.85 for evoked responses) function. Patients and controls had similar reductions in evoked quadriceps responses, voluntary activation and similar endurance.ConclusionsThis test provides reliable evaluation but FNMS exhibits limitations due to insufficient stimulation intensity particularly in neurogenic conditions. It showed similar central and peripheral quadriceps fatigability in patients and controls.SignificanceThis test may be a valuable tool for patient follow-up although further development of magnetic stimulation devices is needed to extend its applicability.

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