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a Departments of Physical Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
b Departments of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
c Departments of MedicineSection of Geriatric Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Jennifer S. Brach, GCS, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, 6035 Forbes Tower, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 E-mail: jbrach{at}pitt.edu.
Decision Editor: John E. Morley, MB, BCh
| Abstract |
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Methods. Right quadriceps muscle activity was recorded using surface electromyography (sEMG) from 160 older women (age 73.9 ± 3.9 years, mean ± SD). Specific patterns of muscle activity during the chair stand task were determined using an exploratory principal components factor analysis (PCFA). Muscle activity parameters were validated by comparison to the Physical Performance Test, gait speed, and the Functional Status Questionnaire.
Results. The PCFA indicated two factors (magnitude and timing) that represented important components of quadriceps muscle activity during chair stand, explaining 68.6% of the variance in performance. The slope of the rise of muscle activity represents a combination of the magnitude and timing components of muscle activity. Compared with women with a slope <1, women with a slope
1 walked faster (1.17 m/s vs 1.09 m/s; p = .02) and reported less difficulty with activities of daily living (ADL) (98.6 vs 95.8; p = .003) and instrumental ADL (97.3 vs 92.2; p = .001).
Conclusions. Quadriceps muscle activity recorded during chair stand is a valid and reliable measure of muscle performance during a functional task. As a biologic measure of muscle activation, sEMG may identify muscle impairment, which could indicate functional decline earlier than measures of functional status.
Apreclinical state of disability is characterized by the development of impairment or early functional limitations that are not yet clinically apparent (1)(2). Individuals with preclinical disability are believed to be at high risk for future disability.
A lower extremity battery has been used successfully in predicting future disability in individuals who were nondisabled at baseline (3). However, some individuals identified as being "at risk for future disability" were likely already disabled at baseline given their walking speed (<0.77 m/s), which was lower than the average gait speed of older adults (1.21.3 m/s) (4)(5). Ideally, we would like to identify individuals at risk for future decline before they have difficulty with a functional task.
In a healthier population that is walking at or near the desired gait speed of 1.2 to 1.3 m/s, the lower extremity battery may demonstrate a ceiling effect. An impairment-based measure of muscle could be used to identify individuals with preclinical disability among nondisabled older adults.
We describe assessing lower extremity muscle performance during chair stand using surface electromyography (sEMG). The sEMG can be recorded during the chair stand task, thus providing information about muscle recruitment and pattern activation as the individual uses their muscle during a meaningful task (6).
The purpose of this study is to describe a new approach of measuring muscle impairment during a functional task in community-dwelling older women. We describe patterns of quadriceps muscle activity as measured by sEMG during a chair stand task and determine the validity and the test-retest reliability of the measure.
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Measures
Muscle Activation During Chair Stand Task.--
Muscle activity was recorded from the right quadriceps muscle during the task of standing from a chair (Myosystem 1200; Noraxon, Scottsdale, AZ). The raw EMG signal was full-wave rectified and integrated with a 15-millisecond "sliding window" of integration. The electrodes were placed 3 inches proximal to the superior border of the patella. Participants were asked to stand from the chair with their arms crossed over their chest and then to return to the seated position. Peak muscle activity, total muscle activity (area), and time to peak muscle activity for both phases of the chair stand task (standing and sitting) were recorded for the right quadriceps muscle (Fig. 1). To determine the test-retest reliability, a subsample of the participants (n = 15) underwent two tests, at least 30 minutes apart, on the same day.
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Data Analysis.-- The sEMG variables (peak, area, and time to peak) recorded during the standing and sitting component of the chair stand were subjected to an exploratory principal-components factor analysis (PCFA) to determine specific patterns of quadriceps muscle activity during the chair stand task. The exploratory PCFA was calculated with an eigenvalue of one and a varimax rotation of the component loadings.
The validity of the patterns of sEMG muscle activity was examined by comparison to the seven-item PPT, gait speed, and the ADL and IADL subscales of the FSQ. Construct validity of the sEMG measure was examined by describing the sEMG parameters in relation to the individual's perceived difficulty of standing from a chair taken from the response to one question from the FSQ. To determine the test-retest reliability of the sEMG parameters, Pearson Product Moment correlations were calculated.
| Results |
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All subjects had a higher peak muscle activity and a greater area under the curve with the standing component compared with the sitting component (Table 1 ). The time to peak muscle activity was longer for the sitting component of the task. The sEMG parameters were quite variable across subjects, as demonstrated by the relatively large range in the values and the large standard deviations.
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1 or slope <1) on the basis of the slope of the rise of muscle activity during the standing component of the chair stand task (Table 3 ). Compared with women who had a slope <1, women with a slope
1 walked faster (1.17 m/s vs 1.09 m/s) and reported less difficulty with ADL (98.6 vs 95.8) and IADL (97.3 vs 92.2).
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| Discussion |
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On the basis of the disablement model of the World Health Organization (13), we would expect biologic changes (i.e., changes in muscle recruitment) to occur prior to a disability (i.e., difficulty standing from a chair). To begin to understand if the sEMG measure during chair stand represents physical performance differently from the self-report, we explored the range and variance of the sEMG slope among persons with no difficulty in rising from a chair. In our sample of women performing at a high functional level, the women who reported having no difficulty with the chair stand task varied greatly on the slope of the sEMG activity with standing (mean 1.30, SD 1.32; range 0.127.51). Of the women who reported no difficulty standing from a chair, 45% had a slope less than the mean value of the slope of muscle activity for the women who reported difficulty standing from a chair (<0.64). Gait speed, a commonly used measure to predict disability, did not vary as greatly as the slope of muscle activity with standing in women who did not report difficulty standing from a chair (mean 1.14, SD 0.19; range 0.481.63). Of the women who reported no difficulty with standing from a chair, 30% had a gait speed less than the mean gait speed for the women who reported difficulty standing from a chair (<1.06 m/s). The women who reported no difficulty in chair stand but were identified by a low sEMG slope would not have been recognized as at risk for future disability on the basis of mean gait speed. Using the National Institute on Aging Short Physical Performance Battery (3)(14), 97.7% of the women who reported no difficulty with standing from a chair in this study would have scored a 4 (highest quartile of scoring) on the gait component of the battery.
Future studies are warranted to determine if individuals with a low slope of the rise of muscle activity with standing are at increased risk for future functional decline. Muscle recruitment, an impairment measure, may provide an earlier indicator of risk for functional decline than other physical performance measures.
| Acknowledgments |
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Data were presented at the American Physical Therapy Association, Combined Sections Meeting, New Orleans, LA, February 2000.
Received November 16, 2000
Accepted December 14, 2000
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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V. Dubost, O. Beauchet, P. Manckoundia, F. Herrmann, and F. Mourey Decreased Trunk Angular Displacement During Sitting Down: An Early Feature of Aging Physical Therapy, May 1, 2005; 85(5): 404 - 412. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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