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  • Electro-mechanical delay

    Dear all,

    Summertime is always a good time for thinking about things that we
    somehow never got round to figuring out. One of these is
    electromechanical delay. As you know, every muscle contraction is
    accompanied by an electrical phenomenon (myoelectric response), which
    can be detected by surface or indwelling electrodes as the EMG.

    The question I want to ask is whether there is any time delay between
    these two events? This might sound obvious when you think of the raw
    EMG, but I have always followed David Winter's reasoning that EMG
    should always be smoothed at a frequency related to the twitch time of
    the muscle (usually about 3 Hz for lower-limb muscles) so that its
    envelope most closely matches the force generated by the muscle.

    When this is done, I think I am correct in saying that there will be
    no electromechanical delay, since the pattern of EMG and force will be
    virtually the same. I know that some people smooth at a somewhat
    higher frequency (10-20 Hz), at which the delay between electrical and
    mechanical response is noticeable (anything from 30-100 ms). But it
    seems to me that this is a rather arbitrary result, which is simply a
    function of the filter cutoff.

    So, my questions are:

    1. Is there, in fact, such a thing as electro-mechanical delay?
    2. If so, how should it be defined?
    3. What is it for common muscles?

    I look forward to your thoughts!

    Chris
    --
    Dr. Chris Kirtley MD PhD
    Associate Professor
    Dept. of Biomedical Engineering
    Catholic University of America
    Washington DC 20064

    Gait: http://www.univie.ac.at/cga
    Radio: http://radiolistener.blogspot.com
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