Title :
The effect of random modulation of functional electrical stimulation parameters on muscle fatigue
Author :
Graham, Geoffrey M. ; Thrasher, T. Adam ; Popovic, Milos R.
Author_Institution :
Med. Devices Bur. of Health Canada, Ottawa, Ont., Canada
fDate :
3/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Muscle contractions induced by functional electrical stimulation (FES) tend to result in rapid muscle fatigue, which greatly limits activities such as FES-assisted standing and walking. It was hypothesized that muscle fatigue caused by FES could be reduced by randomly modulating parameters of the electrical stimulus. Seven paraplegic subjects participated in this study. While subjects were seated, FES was applied to quadriceps and tibialis anterior muscles bilaterally using surface electrodes. The isometric force was measured, and the time for the force to drop by 3 dB (fatigue time) and the normalized force-time integral (FTI) were determined. Four different modes of FES were applied in random order: constant stimulation, randomized frequency (mean 40 Hz), randomized current amplitude, and randomized pulsewidth (mean 250 μs). In randomized trials, stimulation parameters were stochastically modulated every 100 ms in a range of ±15% using a uniform probability distribution. There was no significant difference between the fatigue time measurements for the four modes of stimulation. There was also no significant difference in the FTI measurements. Therefore, our particular method of stochastic modulation of the stimulation parameters, which involved moderate (15%) variations updated every 100 ms and centered around 40 Hz, appeared to have no effect on muscle fatigue. There was a strong correlation between maximum force measurements and stimulation order, which was not apparent in the fatigue time or FTI measurements. It was concluded that a 10-min rest period between stimulation trials was insufficient to allow full recovery of muscle strength.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biomedical electrodes; fatigue; gait analysis; neuromuscular stimulation; stochastic processes; 100 ms; FES-assisted standing; FES-assisted walking; constant stimulation; functional electrical stimulation parameters; isometric force; muscle contractions; muscle fatigue; normalized force-time integral; paraplegic subjects; quadriceps; random modulation; randomized current amplitude; randomized frequency; randomized pulsewidth; stochastic modulation; surface electrodes; tibialis anterior muscles; uniform probability distribution; Electrodes; Fatigue; Force measurement; Frequency; Legged locomotion; Muscles; Neuromuscular stimulation; Probability distribution; Space vector pulse width modulation; Time measurement; Functional electrical stimulation (FES); isometric contraction; muscle fatigue; spinal cord injury (SCI); stimulation frequency; Action Potentials; Adult; Algorithms; Axons; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Electric Stimulation; Humans; Isometric Contraction; Muscle Fatigue; Muscle, Skeletal; Nerve Fibers; Neurotransmitter Agents; Random Allocation; Synapses;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2006.870490