Fatigue-related changes in intermuscular electromyographic coherence across rotator cuff and deltoid muscles in individuals with and without subacromial pain
Yu, Xin Sienna., Zhu, Huiying. & Griffin, L. (2024). Fatigue-related changes in intermuscular electromyographic coherence across rotator cuff and deltoid muscles in individuals with and without subacromial pain. Journal of Neurophysiology(132), 617–627. doi:10.1152/jn.00431.2023.
Abstract
Neuromuscular fatigue induces superior migration of the humeral head in individuals with subacromial pain. This has been attributed to weakness of rotator cuff muscles and overactive deltoid muscles. Investigation of common inputs to motoneuron pools of the rotator cuff and deltoid muscles offers valuable insight into the underlying mechanisms of neuromuscular control deficits associated with subacromial pain. This study aims to investigate intermuscular coherence across the rotator cuff and deltoid muscles during a sustained submaximal isometric fatiguing contraction in individuals with and without subacromial pain. Twenty symptomatic and 18 asymptomatic young adults participated in this study. Surface electromyogram (EMG) was recorded from the middle deltoid (MD) and infraspinatus (IS). Intramuscular EMG was recorded with fine-wire electrodes in the supraspinatus (SS). Participants performed an isometric fatiguing contraction of 30 scaption at 25% maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) until endurance limit. Pooled coherence of muscle pairs (SS-IS, SS-MD, IS-MD) in the 2–5 Hz (delta), 5–15 Hz (alpha), and 15–35 Hz (beta) frequency bands during the initial and final 30 s of the fatigue task were compared. SS-IS and SS-MD delta-band coherence increased with fatigue in the asymptomatic group but not the symptomatic group. In the alpha and beta bands, SS-IS and SS-MD coherence increased with fatigue in both groups. IS-MD beta-band coherence was greater in the symptomatic than the asymptomatic group. Individuals with subacromial pain failed to increase common drive across rotator cuff and deltoid muscles and have altered control strategies during neuromuscular fatigue. This may contribute to glenohumeral joint instability and subacromial pain experienced by these individuals.