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The Thermal Effects of Pulsed Shortwave Diathermy on Electromyography and Mechanomyography. Sarah Marek November 17, 2004. Objectives. Background & Significance Purpose Research Questions & Hypotheses Design Methods Data Analysis Assumptions, Delimitations, & Limitations
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The Thermal Effects of Pulsed Shortwave Diathermy on Electromyography and Mechanomyography Sarah Marek November 17, 2004
Objectives • Background & Significance • Purpose • Research Questions & Hypotheses • Design • Methods • Data Analysis • Assumptions, Delimitations, & Limitations • Research Benefits
Why Use Heat? • Physiological effects of heat • Increases extensibility of collagen tissues • Relaxes muscles • Provides pain relief • Increases blood flow • Muscle is often the target tissue • Need deep penetration of heat • Need large treatment area • Pulsed Shortwave Diathermy (PSWD) & Ultrasound are considered deep heating modalities
Why Use PSWD? • Studies have shown PSWD increases intramuscular temperature about 4.0°C during treatment and decays about 1.8°C 10min post-treatment (Draper et al 1999; Draper et al 1997; Castel et al 1997)
Heat & Tissue Properties • Low-load, long-duration stretching with PSWD causes a greater increase in range of motion (ROM) than stretch alone • Increases in ROM were still present for a period after the treatment was stopped • May cause changes to the properties of the musculotendinous unit (Peres et al 2002; Draper et al 2004)
EMG & MMG • Electromyography (EMG) – records the sum of the electrical muscle action potentials • Mechanomyography (MMG) – records the sounds caused by the lateral oscillations of the contracting skeletal muscles • Together EMG & MMG can give information about the relationship between the electrical and mechanical events of excitation-contraction coupling
Purpose • PSWD may change the musculotendinous properties of skeletal muscles • EMG & MMG can characterize the changes that PSWD may cause to the neurological and mechanical properties of skeletal muscles • Purpose: • To examine the thermal effects of PSWD on force production, EMG, and MMG during isometric ramp contractions
Research Questions • Does a 20-min PSWD treatment change EMG and MMG during an isometric ramp contraction? • Does a 20-min PSWD treatment change force production, EMG, and MMG during maximal voluntary contractions?
Main Hypotheses • As temperature increases we expect: • MMG amplitude will not change during the MVC • MMG amplitude to increase during the ramp contraction • EMG frequency to increase • No change in EMG amplitude • MMG frequency to increase • As force production increases • EMG amplitude will increase linearly • MMG amplitude will increase up to 80% MVC and then decrease to 100%
Design • 2 × 3 mixed factorial design to examine force production, EMG, and MMG during MVCs • Time • Pre-treatment • Post-treatment • Treatment • Control • Diathermy • Sham-Diathermy
Design • 2 × 3 × 9 mixed factorial design to examine EMG and MMG during isometric ramp contractions • %MVC • 5% • 15% • 25% • 35% • 45% • 55% • 65% • 75% • 85% • Treatment • Control • Diathermy • Sham-Diathermy • Time • Pre-treatment • Post-treatment
Methods • Subjects • 34 Males • Ages 19 to 35 yrs • Free of health risks • No injury within the past 12 months to the knee, thigh, or lower leg • Skinfold thickness ≤ 30 mm • No metal implants or cardiac pacemakers • Randomized group placement • Control (n=10) • Diathermy (n=12) • Sham-diathermy (n=12)
Methods • Procedure • Familiarization Trial • Informed consent • Health history questionnaire • Skinfold measurements • Trials • Experimental Trial • EMG & MMG sensor placement • Pre-test • Thermocouple insertion • Treatment • Post-test
Methods • Testing • 2 MVCs • Isometric contraction at 60° knee flexion • 3 sec contraction • 2 ramp contractions • 3 sec isometric contraction at 60° knee flexion at 5% MVC • Gradual, linear increase from 5% to 85% MVC • 2 min rest between each trial
Methods Thermocouple • Instruments • 16-channel Isothermex • Isothermex, Columbus, OH • Intramuscular-implantable thermocouple • Physitemp Instruments, Type IT-21 (diameter = .41 mm), Clifton, NJ • Biodex System 3 dynamometer • Biodex Medical Systems, Inc., Shirley, New York • Active miniature rugged accelerometer • Entran Inc., EGAS-FS, Fairfield, NJ • Bipolar surface electrode arrangement • Moore Medical, Ag-AgCl
Data Analysis • 2 × 3 (TIME × TREATMENT) mixed factorial ANCOVA to analyze the dependent variables for the MVCs • 2 × 3 × 9 (TIME × TREATMENT × %MVC) mixed factorial ANCOVA to analyze the dependent variables for the ramp contractions • Change in intramuscular temperature from baseline will be the covariate
Assumptions • Subjects will accurately fill out the health history questionnaire • Subjects will perform the MVC and ramp contractions to the best of their ability
Delimitations • Males between the ages of 19 and 35 years of age • Males without injury to the right knee, thigh, or lower leg within the past 12 months • Males that have a thigh skinfold thickness ≤ 30 mm • Males who are able to complete a successful isometric ramp contraction
Limitations • Differences in skinfold thickness between left and right thigh • Changes in room temperature between subjects • Learning effect • Subject selection • Subject communication • Psychological effects
Research Benefits • Provide allied health care practitioners (physicians, certified athletic trainers, physical therapists, occupational therapists, nurses, and massage therapists) with valuable information regarding the effects of diathermy on neuromuscular function