E-stim for muscle contraction Flashcards

1
Q

neuromuscular electrical stimulation

A
  • the use of electrical current to produce muscle contraction in innervated muscle
  • requires intact PNS
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2
Q

Use of NMES

A
  • populations with CVA, spinal cord injury, sports related injury, post operative conditions and healthy athletes
  • can strengthen muscle reeducate, retard/prevent muscle atrophy, reduce spasticity, and help in managing edema via the muscle pump action
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3
Q

Physiologically induced muscule contraction

A
  • activate Type 1 slow twitch first
  • low contraction force
  • slow speed of contraction
  • asynchronous recruitment of motor units
  • fatigue resistant
  • atrophy resistant
  • smooth onset
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4
Q

E-stim induced muscle contraction

A
  • fast twitch type 2 activated first
  • high contraction force
  • fast speed of contraction
  • synchronous recruitment (all or non)
  • fatigues quickly
  • atrophies quickly
  • have rapid jerky onset
  • patients should also preform active contractions to stimulate type 1
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5
Q

Mechanisms of strengthening: overload principle

A
  • increased load and higher force contraction leads to increased strength
  • with e-stim force is increased by manipulating: intensity, pulse duration (width), electrode size, external resistance/positioning (AG, GM etc.)
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6
Q

Mechanism of strengthening: specificity principle

A
  • muscle contraction specifically strengthens the fibers that contract
  • therefore e-stim has a greater effect on type 2 fast twitch fibers
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7
Q

Parameters for muscule strengthening

Frequency/intensity/duration

A
  • high duration between 200-300 microseconds
  • shorter duration (150-200) for smaller muscles
  • longer duration (250-350) for larger muscles
  • shorter durations require higher intensity
  • frequency usually 35-70
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8
Q

how to get a tetanic contraction

A
  • lower frequency creates separate muscule twitches
  • as twitches get closer together (increased frequency) it creates a tetanic contraction
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9
Q

types of contractions with ES

A
  • twitch
  • un-fused tetany
  • tetany
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10
Q

twitch contraction

A
  • the smallest contraction that can be elicited from a muscle 1-5pps
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11
Q

un-fused tetany

A
  • some twitch and some tetany
  • 5-20 pps
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12
Q

tetany

A
  • smooth, strong contraction produced in response to faster delivery of action potentials
  • 30-50 pps
  • up to 70pps you increase the effective energy of the contraction
  • above 100 pps the muscle will fatigue faster
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13
Q

waveform used to stimulate innervated muscle

A
  • pulsed biphasic waveform - wide width and rate of 35-70
  • russian protocal or russian stim
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14
Q

Russian stim

A
  • present in the machine
  • consists of medium frequency AC with a carrier frequency of 2500 Hz delivered in 50 bursts per second
  • 10 millisecond burst duration and inter-burst interval
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15
Q

Electrode placement for muscle contraction

A
  • usually 2 electrodes per muscle
  • 1 electrode on the motor point
  • usually muscle belly the other aligned parallel to the muscle fibers at least 2 inches a part
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16
Q

Patient positioning for muscle contraction

A
  • related to the goal of isometric muscle contraction or isotonic motion
17
Q

on/off time

A
  • allows for rest between contractions
  • usually start with 1:5 ratio for strengthening
  • depends on your goal (muscle pumping or strengthening)
  • can adjust on/off time to make it harder or easier
18
Q

what is the best on/off time for
1. muscle strengthening/re-ed
2. edema reduction using muscle pump
3. muscle spasm reduction (produce fatigue)
4. functional E-stim

A
  1. 10 seconds on/50 seconds off
  2. 2-5 seconds on/2-5 seconds off
  3. 2-5 seconds on/2-5 seconds off
  4. as needed for functional activity
19
Q

ramp time

A
  • allows for a gradual increase and decrease of force
  • generally 1-4 seconds
20
Q

current amplitude

fore-stim muscule contraction

A
  • desired strength of contraction
  • strengthening if uninjured = 50% maximum voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC)
  • recovery from injury or surgery >10% of MVIC
  • Ms spasm reduction/edem = visible contraction
21
Q

Functional electrical stimulation

A
  • can be used to help with walking or other activities and can be worn
22
Q

Denervated muscle for muscle contraction

A
  • direct current
  • when muscle becomes denervated by injury or disease it can no longer contract physiologically or with NMES
  • it requires stimulation of the muscle fiber directly
23
Q

requirements for denervated muscle

A
  • longer duration (width) stimulus so interrupted direct current applied for number of seconds to create contraction
  • duration controlled by therapist
  • requires higher intensity so it is uncomfortable
24
Q

when to use stim for denervated muscle

A
  • if the nerve is not intact or functioning it requires stimulation of the muscle fiber directly
25
Q

How to set up denervated e-stim

A
  • DC current
  • long duration
  • high intensity
  • monopolar set up (net charge)
  • watch for changes in the skin