• DocumentCode
    1259239
  • Title

    Functional neuromuscular stimulation controlled by surface electromyographic signals produced by volitional activation of the same muscle: adaptive removal of the muscle response from the recorded EMG-signal

  • Author

    Sennels, Søren ; Biering-Sorensen, F. ; Andersen, Ole Trier ; Hansen, Steffen Duus

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Math. Modeling, Tech. Univ. Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
  • Volume
    5
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    6/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    195
  • Lastpage
    206
  • Abstract
    In order to use the volitional electromyography (EMG) as a control signal for the stimulation of the same muscle, it is necessary to eliminate the stimulation artifacts and the muscle responses caused by the stimulation. The stimulation artifacts, caused by the electric field in skin and tissue generated by the stimulation current, are relatively easy to eliminate by shutting down the EMG-amplifier at the onset of the stimulation pulses. The muscle response is a nonstationary signal, therefore, an adaptive linear prediction filter is proposed. The filter is implemented and for three filter lengths tested on both simulated and real data. The filter performance is compared with a conventional fixed comb filter. The simulations indicate that the adaptive filter is relatively insensitive to variations in amplitude of the muscle responses, and for all filter lengths produces a good filtering. For variations in shape of the muscle responses and for real data, an increased filter performance can be achieved by increasing the filter length. Using a filter length of up to seven stimulation periods, it is possible to reduce real muscle responses to a level comparable with the background noise. Using the shut-down circuit and the adaptive filter both the stimulation artifacts and the muscle responses can be effectively eliminated from the EMG signal from a stimulated muscle. It is therefore possible to extract the volitional EMG from a partly paralyzed muscle and use it for controlling the stimulation of the same muscle
  • Keywords
    adaptive signal processing; biocontrol; electromyography; medical signal processing; muscle; neurophysiology; patient treatment; filter length; fixed comb filter; functional neuromuscular stimulation; muscle stimulation control signal; nonstationary signal; partly paralyzed muscle; stimulation pulses onset; volitional EMG; volitional electromyography; Adaptive filters; Electromyography; Filtering; Muscles; Neuromuscular stimulation; Nonlinear filters; Pulse generation; Shape; Skin; Testing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1063-6528
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/86.593293
  • Filename
    593293