Abstract

Introduction Due to their complex anatomy, the general activation of lumbar muscles can be estimated with surface electromyography (sEMG) while intramuscular EMG is recommended to isolate information from different back muscles. Whether high-density sEMG recordings can represent the contribution of individual lumbar muscles, as identified with indwelling EMG, needs to be investigated. Material and methods Muscle activity from the right longissimus (L1 and L4) and deep and superficial multifidus (L4) was recorded in eleven participants using fine-wire electrodes during isometric trunk flexions at 20-degrees. We positioned a 13 × 5 electrodes grid over the right lumbar region (L1 to L4) to record sEMG. We used cross-correlations between non-rectified signals from indwelling and sEMG. The spatial location was determined as the medio-lateral and cranio-caudal coordinates of the centroid of the electrodes exhibiting the highest cross-correlation values. To establish an automated approach to identify the spatial distribution of sEMG recordings, we used the independent component analysis (ICA). Results On the sEMG, the centroid of multifidus activity identified with indwelling EMG was medial to that representing longissimus (P Conclusion The spatial distribution of sEMG amplitude provides information on the activation of individual lumbar muscles. Automated EMG decomposition approaches are useful to identify the distinct contribution of individual lumbar muscles using sEMG.

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