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Physiotherapy Theory and Practice
An International Journal of Physical Therapy
Volume 38, 2022 - Issue 1
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Research Report

Traces of muscular fatigue in the rectus femoris identified with surface electromyography and wavelets on normal gait

, PT, MScORCID Icon, , MD, PhD & , PT, PhD
Pages 211-225 | Received 16 May 2019, Accepted 04 Jan 2020, Published online: 11 Feb 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Background: Although the median frequency is used as a basis to assess the presence of muscular fatigue, some studies have found that it is not a good estimator for this purpose. Physiotherapists often deal with patients with movement issues related to fatigue. A new objective estimator that is easy to obtain and interpret can help with the management of such patients.

Objective and Purpose: The aim of this study was to identify the frequency bands most affected by fatigue and propose a protocol to obtain such information.

Methods: Thirty healthy subjects (age 22.05 ± 2.42 years, height 1.71 ± 0.08 m, and weight 68.75 ± 11.42 kg) were recruited to measure the rectus femoris electromyography (EMG) of both legs during gait, before and after a fatiguing protocol. Four frequency bands were studied: high frequency (107–250 Hz), midfrequency (65–94 Hz), 40 Hz (34–53 Hz), and low frequency (< 25 Hz). Each frequency band is related to different aspects of the muscular contraction.

Results: The main finding is that the ratios of the 40-Hz frequency and low-frequency bands showed significant differences in both legs between pre-fatigue and post-fatigue recordings. Critical thresholds F* 4.86 and 4.93 were exceeded at 4.5–8.7%, 30.64–46%.38, 63.75–66.8%, and 83.69–90.79% and at 0–2.53%, 4.7–15.21%, 18.15–54.65%, and 55.81–99.95% of the gait cycle, respectively, with p values < .05.

Conclusions: The low-frequency band constitutes the best indicator to assess fatigue in gait.

Disclosure Statement

The authors report no conflict of interest.

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