Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
557691 Biomedical Signal Processing and Control 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Surface electromyogram (EMG) detected by electrode arrays along the muscle fibre direction can be approximated by the sum of propagating and non propagating components. A technique to separate propagating and non propagating components in surface EMG signals is developed. The first step is an adaptive filter, which allows obtaining an estimation of the delay between signals detected at different channels and a first estimate of propagating and non propagating components; the second step is used to optimise the estimation of the two components. The method is applicable to signals with one propagating and one non propagating component. It was optimised on simulated signals, and then applied to single motor unit action potentials (MUAP) and to electrically elicited EMG (M-waves).The new method was first tested on phenomenological signals constituted by the sum of a propagating and a non propagating signal and then applied to simulated and experimental EMG signals. Simulated signals were generated by a cylindrical, layered volume conductor model. Experimental signals were monopolar surface EMG signals collected from the abductor pollicis brevis muscle and M-waves recorded during transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the biceps muscle. The technique may find different applications: in single motor unit (MU) studies (a) for decreasing the variability and bias of CV estimates due to the presence of the non propagating components, (b) for estimating automatically the length of the muscle fibres from only three detected channels and (c) for removal of the stimulation artifact M-waves.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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