Abstract

The myoelectric activity of the back muscles can be studied to evaluate the flexion-relaxation phenomenon and find differences between electromyography patterns on different subjects. In this paper, we propose an algorithm able to provide a myoelectric silence evaluation based on the data acquired from a wireless body sensor network consisting of surface electromyography sensors in association with a wearable inertial measurement unit. From the study group was chosen a gold standard subject, a healthy control with the best regular patterns, as a reference to find a first validity range. Through the subsequent iterations, the range was modified to include the other healthy subjects who showed muscle relaxation according to the previous ranges. Through this likelihood analysis, we want to compare patterns on different channels, identified by the electromyography root mean squared values, to study and find with iterations a validity range for the myoelectric activity silence identification and classification. The proposed algorithm was tested by processing the data collected in an acquisition campaign conducted to evaluate the flexion-relaxation phenomenon on the back muscles of subjects with and without lower back pain. The results show that the submitted method is significant for the clinical assessment of electromyography activity patterns to evaluate which are the subjects that have patterns near or far from the gold standard. This analysis is useful both for prevention and for assessing the progress of subjects with low back pain undergoing physiotherapy.

Highlights

  • Relaxation of the erector spinae occurs during the trunk full-flexion phase when the bending movement from standing is performed

  • We propose an algorithm capable of providing an flexion-relaxation phenomenon (FRP) evaluation based on the data acquired from a wireless body sensor network (WBSN) composed of surface electromyography (sEMG) and inertial measurement unit (IMU) sensors

  • The mean RMS sEMG value found in our results of 4.09 μV is near the 3.5 μV found by Neblett [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Relaxation of the erector spinae occurs during the trunk full-flexion phase when the bending movement from standing is performed. This flexion-relaxation (FR) has traditionally been assessed by observing and analyzing surface electromyography (sEMG) signals when the subject bends toward a maximum voluntary flexion (MVF). Such a phenomenon, referred to as the flexion-relaxation phenomenon (FRP), typically manifests in healthy subjects and is often absent or disrupted (sEMG activity persists) in individuals reporting lower back pain (LBP) [1]. The generated motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) recorded on the skin surface vary in amplitude, duration, and frequency content [4]

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