Abstract

After a stroke, antagonist muscle activation during agonist command impedes movement. This study compared measurements of antagonist muscle activation using surface bipolar EMG in the gastrocnemius medialis (GM) and high-density (HD) EMG in the GM and soleus (SO) during isometric submaximal and maximal dorsiflexion efforts, with knee flexed and extended, in 12 subjects with chronic hemiparesis. The coefficients of antagonist activation (CAN) of GM and SO were calculated according to the ratio of the RMS amplitude during dorsiflexion effort to the maximal agonist effort for the same muscle. Bipolar CAN (BipCAN) was compared to CAN from channel-specific (CsCAN) and overall (OvCAN) normalizations of HD-EMG. The location of the CAN centroid was explored in GM, and CAN was compared between the medial and lateral portions of SO. Between-EMG system differences in GM were observed in maximal efforts only, between BipCAN and CsCAN with lower values in BipCAN (p < 0.001), and between BipCAN and OvCAN with lower values in OvCAN (p < 0.05). The CAN centroid is located mid-height and medially in GM, while the CAN was similar in medial and lateral SO. In chronic hemiparesis, the estimates of GM hyperactivity differ between bipolar and HD-EMGs, with channel-specific and overall normalizations yielding, respectively, higher and lower CAN values than bipolar EMG. HD-EMG would be the way to develop personalized rehabilitation programs based on individual antagonist activations.

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