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Central and peripheral fatigue of the knee extensor muscles induced by electromyostimulation.

The main purpose of this study was to characterise neuromuscular fatigue induced by 30 contractions of the knee extensor muscles evoked by electromyostimulation (EMS). Twelve healthy subjects were tested before and after a typical EMS session (frequency: 75 Hz, on-off ratio: 6.25 s on-20 s off) used for quadriceps femoris muscle strengthening. Surface electromyographic (EMG) activity and torque obtained during maximal voluntary and electrically evoked contractions were analysed to distinguish peripheral from central fatigue. Maximal voluntary torque of the knee extensor muscles decreased approximately 20 % (p < 0.001) following EMS. In the same way, peak torque associated to single (p < 0.05) and paired (p < 0.001) stimuli as well as M-wave amplitude (p < 0.05) significantly decreased as a result of EMS. The raw EMG activity of both vastus lateralis and rectus femoris muscle recorded during maximal voluntary isometric contraction significantly decreased after the session (-17.3 and -14.5 %, respectively) whereas no changes were observed when EMG signals were normalised to respective M-wave amplitudes. Similarly, voluntary activation estimated by using the twitch interpolation technique was unchanged following EMS. In conclusion, a typical session of EMS of the knee extensor muscles mainly induced neuromuscular propagation failure while excitation-contraction coupling and neural mechanisms were not significantly affected. It is recommended to interpret surface EMG data together with the corresponding M wave, at least for the knee extensor muscles, in order to distinguish peripheral from central causes of fatigue.

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