EMG Flashcards

1
Q

3 EMG electrodes

A

Reference, ground, recording

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2
Q

Which electrodes are typically used in
a) small animals
b) large animals

A

a) concentric
b) monopolar (sharper edge, less painful, more noise, less precise)

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3
Q

Where do we place the ground electrode for:
a) Pelvic limbs
b) Thoracic limbs
c) head

A

a) Stifle
b) Olecranon
c) occipital protuberance

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4
Q

Negative deflection =

A

upward

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5
Q

Name the normal EMG pattenrs

A

Electrically silent
Insertional activity
Miniature end-plate potentials (mEPPs)
End plate potentials/spikes (EPPs)
Motor unit action potentials (MUAPs)

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6
Q

Name the abnormal EMG pattenrs

A

Fibrillation potentials
Positive sharp waves
Complex repetitive discharges (CRDs)
Myotonic potential

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7
Q

Insertional activity
1. Morphology
2. Cause (physiologic)
3. ↑ in ____
4. ↓ in ____

A
  1. Abrupt start/stop, high frequency, crisp static sound
  2. Dysruption of myofibers by needle insertion or movement
  3. Denervation or myopathies
  4. Fibrosis or atrophy

Slide 35

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8
Q

Insertional activity
Start increasing at day ____ and peak at day ____ after denervation injury

A

4, 8

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9
Q

mEPP
1. Morphology
2. Cause
3. Cease after ____
4. ↓ Frequency with ____
5. ↓ Amplitude with ____

A
  1. Small amplitude (5-50 uV), high frequency (5-50 Hz), background activity, 1-2 ms duration, sheashell sound
  2. Spontaneous post-synptic depolarizations (not AP!) due to random ACh quanta release
  3. Denervation
  4. Botulism
  5. MG

Slide 40

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10
Q

EPP/EPS
1. Morphology.
2. How to distinguish from FPs?
3. Cause

A
  1. Biphasic, starting with negative (upward) deflection. Often in association with mEPPs, but larger amplitude
  2. =
    - EPPs = initial upward (negative), often associated with mEPPs.
    - FP = initial downward (+), often associated with PSWs.
  3. Normal spontaneous APs (vs mEPPs = depolarizations) of muscle fibers

Slide 42

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11
Q

MUAPs
a) Morphology
b) Cause

A

a) Biphasic or triphasic, initial -ve deflection, consistent morphology over time. Large amplitude (depends on motor unit density).
b) depolarization of an entire motor unit triggered by voluntary movements

Slide 45

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12
Q

Name the 2 MUAP patterns expected in healthy muscles with increasing muscle contraction strenght

A
  • Recruitment pattern: successive activation of additional motor units with increasing strength of voluntary muscle contractions
  • Interference pattern: overlap of multiple MUAPs which precludes individual MUAP recognition at MAX contraction
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13
Q

Expected MUAP responses at MAX muscle contration for…
a) Healthy muscles
b) Neuropathy
c) Myopathy

SEE TABLE SLIDE 50

A

a) Complete interference pattern
b) Incomplete interference pattern
c) Lower amplitude (yet complete interference)

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14
Q

Fibrillation potentials
1. Morphology
2. Cause
3. Peak ____ days after ____

A
  1. biphasic, ~EPPs but initial deflection is +ve (downward). Sound like fried eggs.
  2. AP from a single, denervated myofiber (occ after needle movement)
  3. 8 days after denervation (with insertional activity)

Pense au F en italique. Slide 52

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15
Q

Positive sharp waves
1. Morphology
2. Cause

A
  1. +ve spike followed by small slow -ve wave. Sound deeper than FPs.
  2. AP from single, denervated myofiber (some argue that they are the same as FPs but different needle position relative to AP)
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16
Q

Complex repetitive discharges (CRD)
1. Morphology
2. Cause

A
  1. Repetitive, polyphasic, uniform, large amplitude, sound like machine gun
  2. GROUP of myofibers firing in synchrony, following CHRONIC denervation. Due to EPHAPTIC spread.

Slide 60

17
Q

Myotonic potentials
1. Morphology
2. Cause

A
  1. Wax-waning amplitude and frequency. Either runs of waves resembling PSWs or FPs. Smaller amplitude than CRD.
  2. Repetitive AP from a single myofiber (vs CRD).