Abstract

Contractile properties of human motor units provide information on the force capacity and fatigability of muscles. The spike-triggered averaging technique (STA) is a conventional method used to estimate the twitch waveform of single motor units in vivo by averaging the joint force signal. Several limitations of this technique have been previously discussed in an empirical way, using simulated and experimental data. In this study, we provide a theoretical analysis of this technique in the frequency domain and describe its intrinsic limitations. By analyzing the analytical expression of STA, first we show that a certain degree of correlation between the motor unit activities prevents an accurate estimation of the twitch force, even from relatively long recordings. Second, we show that the quality of the twitch estimates by STA is highly related to the relative variability of the inter-spike intervals of motor unit action potentials. Interestingly, if this variability is extremely high, correct estimates could be obtained even for high discharge rates. However, for physiological inter-spike interval variability and discharge rate, the technique performs with relatively low estimation accuracy and high estimation variance. Finally, we show that the selection of the triggers that are most distant from the previous and next, which is often suggested, is not an effective way for improving STA estimates and in some cases can even be detrimental. These results show the intrinsic limitations of the STA technique and provide a theoretical framework for the design of new methods for the measurement of motor unit force twitch.

Highlights

  • The contractile properties of a muscle depend on the mechanical characteristics of its functional elements, the motor units [1]

  • Due to the influence of the average discharge rates on correlation measures between spike trains [31], this procedure was used to generate common input strength (CIS) values comparable with the values reported in literature that are commonly estimated with similar discharge rates

  • The estimation of the motor unit twitch forces from the joint force is important to characterize the contractile characteristics of motor units

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Summary

Introduction

The contractile properties of a muscle depend on the mechanical characteristics of its functional elements, the motor units [1]. The spike-triggered averaging (STA) is currently the only technique used to estimate the properties of the motor unit twitch forces in vivo during voluntary contractions [5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. The main assumptions of the method are the linear summation of twitch forces, the uncorrelated activity of concurrently active motor neurons, and the duration of the twitch smaller than the inter-spike interval. Under these assumptions, the averaging increases the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the force expressed by the trigger unit with respect to the other active motor units. If the time duration of the twitch force is longer than the average inter-spike interval of the trigger unit, the estimate is biased by fusion of the twitches

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