Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Biomechanics of Skeletal Muscle and Electroymography

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Biomechanics of Skeletal Muscle and Electroymography"— Presentation transcript:

1 Biomechanics of Skeletal Muscle and Electroymography
Readings: Hamill pp 76-81, Electromyography Readings: Hamill pp 81-85; Cram pp 32-37, Ch 3; DeLuca website tutorial ( ),

2 Factors Influencing Production of Muscular Tension and Applied Force
Motor unit size Muscle Fiber Type Selective recruitment of fiber types: SO FOG FG Length - tension relationship Force-velocity relationship Angle of pull

3 Muscle structure

4 The motor unit

5 Muscle Fiber Types

6 Recruitment proceeds from smallest fibers to largest
(the size principle)

7 Three-component model of muscle contraction

8 Length-tension relationship

9 Angle of pull affects turning effect, or torque

10 Length-tension, Angle of Pull Combined

11 Force- Velocity relationship

12 Electromyography The electromyogram Recording the Electromyogram
Factors affecting electromyogram Analyzing the electromyogram Applications of electromyography

13 The EMG signal

14

15 Recording the electromyogram
Electrodes – Size Number Placement Signal conduction – wires or telemetry? Signal conditioning Amplification Filtering Analog to digital conversion Integration Frequency analysis

16

17 Filtering: Effect of different cutoff frequencies on EMG

18 Factors affecting the electromyogram

19

20 Analyzing the EMG signal

21 The concept of Frequency decomposition

22 Converting EMG from time domain to frequency domain
What is the time block, Or window over which Frequency analysis is done?

23 EMG in the Frequency Domain

24 Applications of electromyography
Timing of excitation Degree of excitation Normalization procedures Muscle force-emg relationship Muscle fatigue Clinical gait analysis Ergonomics Limitations of EMG

25 Timing and degree of excitation

26 EMG-force relationship

27 Electromechanical delay

28 Windowing is a critical step in converting EMG signal from time to frequency domain

29 The fatigue index From EMG – Review the Assumptions Inherent in this procedure

30 Website article reading assignment
Go to website: and download tutorial article on surface electromyography detection and recording Be prepared to answer the following questions: What is differential amplification? What is common mode rejection ratio? Where should electrodes be placed? Where should electrodes not be placed? How large should electrodes be? Name 3 applications of EMG signal

31 Further readings (optional) on Emg methodology
DeLuca, C. J. (1997) The use of surface Electromyography in biomechanics. J Appl Biomech, 19: (can be found on delsys.com website) Morrish, G. (1999) Surface electromyography Methods of analysis, reliability, and main applications Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, 11:


Download ppt "Biomechanics of Skeletal Muscle and Electroymography"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google