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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1177-1184
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Norwegian University of Science and Technology, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway; and 2NeuroMuscular Research Center, Boston University, Boston Massachusetts 02215
Westgaard, R. H.,
P. Bonato, and
K. A. Holte.
Low-Frequency Oscillations (<0.3 Hz) in the Electromyographic
(EMG) Activity of the Human Trapezius Muscle During Sleep. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1177-1184, 2002. The
surface electromyographic (EMG) signal from right and left trapezius
muscles and the heart rate were recorded over 24 h in 27 healthy
female subjects. The root-mean-square (RMS) value of the surface EMG
signals and the heartbeat interval time series were calculated
with a time resolution of 0.2 s. The EMG activity during sleep
showed long periods with stable mean amplitude, modulated by rhythmic
components in the frequency range 0.05-0.2 Hz. The ratio between the
amplitude of the oscillatory components and the mean amplitude of the
EMG signal was approximately constant over the range within which the
phenomenon was observed, corresponding to a peak-to-peak oscillatory
amplitude of ~10% of the mean amplitude. The duration of the periods
with stable mean amplitude ranged from a few minutes to ~1 h, usually
interrupted by a sudden change in the activity level or by cessation of
the muscle activity. Right and left trapezius muscles presented the
same pattern of FM. In supplementary experiments, rhythmic muscle
activity pattern was also demonstrated in the upper extremity muscles
of deltoid, biceps, and forearm flexor muscles. There was no apparent
association between the rhythmic components in the muscle activity
pattern and the heart rate variability. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the above-described pattern of EMG activity during sleep is documented. On reanalysis of earlier recorded trapezius motor
unit firing pattern in experiments on awake subjects in a situation
with mental stress, low-FM of firing with similar frequency content was
detected. Possible sources of rhythmic excitation of trapezius
motoneurons include slow-wave cortical oscillations represented in
descending cortico-spinal pathways, and/or activation by monoaminergic
pathways originating in the brain stem reticular formation. The
analysis of muscle activity patterns may provide an important new tool
to study neural mechanisms in human sleep.
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