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Changes in SEMG during the Long Duration Cycling Exercise

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-30, 16:47 authored by Vijay Singh, Dinesh KumarDinesh Kumar, Barbara PolusBarbara Polus, Sonia La Vita, Steve Fraser
Identification of muscle fatigue using SEMG has always been both desirable and difficult for the engineering and medical community. Changes in SEMG are already established by authors when fatigue occurs as a result of short duration, supramaximal dynamic contraction. But most of the contractions that we have during a days work are not supramaximal and short duration, they are rather continuous and for longer duration and at a sub maximal level. So far reliability of SEMG has not been established for longer duration version of dynamic tasks. This study investigates into these kinds of dynamic contractions where subject performs cyclic dynamic contractions for a long duration. SEMG recordings were analyzed and results were compared with the blood samples and muscle biopsies to validate the results. These invasive techniques are used as current standard and reliable means of identifying muscle fatigue by many sports organizations such as Australian Institute of Sports (AIS), but these techniques are highly invasive, painful, time consuming and expensive. This paper reports a simple signal processing technique to identify muscle fatigue during cyclic activities of muscles such as VL and VM during cycling. Based on the experiments conducted with Nine participants it was found that mechanism of fatigue is different in long duration sub-maximal cyclic exercise as compared to short duration, supramaximal dynamic cycling activity. Same was observed from this present study as the signal processing techniques described by authors in [12] were not successful to identify muscle fatigue in long duration sub-maximal cycling exercise.

History

Outlet

Proceedings of the 28th IEEE EMBS Annual International Conference

Editors

A. Hielscher

Name of conference

IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society International Conference

Publisher

IEEE

Place published

New York

Start date

2006-08-30

End date

2006-09-03

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 IEEE

Former Identifier

2006001816

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-04-08

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