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J Neurophysiol (May 7, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.00706.2007
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Submitted on June 26, 2007
Accepted on May 5, 2008

Anatomic basis for individuated surface EMG and homogeneous electrostimulation with neuroprostheses of the Extensor Digitorum Communis

Joris N Leijnse1*, Stewart R Carter2, Amit Gupta3, and Steven J McCabe4

1 Mechanical engineering, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States
2 School of Medicine, university of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States
3 Louisville Arm and Hand Center, Norton Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky, United States
4 School of Public Health, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jnleij01{at}louisville.edu.

The Extensor Digitorum Communis (ED) is generally regarded as a fairly undiversified muscle that gives extensor tendons to all fingers. Some fine wire EMG investigations have been carried out to study individuation of the muscle parts to the different fingers. However, individuated surface EMG of the ED has not been investigated. This study analyses the anatomy of the ED muscle parts to the different fingers in detail, and proposes optimal locations for surface or indwelling electrodes for individuated EMG and for electrostimulation with neuroprostheses. The dissections show that the ED arises from extensive origin tendons (OT) which originate at the lateral epicondyle and reach far in the forearm. The ED OT is V-shaped, with shorter central tendon fibers, but with a long radial and an even longer ulnar slip. The ED parts to the individual fingers consistently arise from distinct OT locations: the ED3 (medius) arises proximally, the ED2 (index) from the radial slip distal to ED3, the ED4 (ring finger) from the ulnar slip distal to ED3, and the ED5 (to ring/little finger) from the ulnar slip distal to ED4. This lengthwise widely spaced arrangement of ED parts compensates to some degree for the narrow ED width and suggests that ED parts should be individually assessable by indwelling and even by surface EMG electrodes, albeit in the latter case with variable mutual crosstalk. Conversely, the anatomic spacing of ED parts warrants that electromyographic stimulation with neuroprostheses by a single implanted electrode cannot likely homogeneously activate all ED parts.







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