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Electromyography is a
test that measures muscle response to nervous
stimulation. A needle electrode is inserted
through the skin into the muscle. Each muscle
fiber that contracts will produce an action
potential. The presence, size, and shape
of the wave form of the action potential
produced on the oscilloscope, provides information
about the ability of the muscle to respond
to nervous stimulation.
Why the test is performed
EMG is most often used when people have
symptoms of weakness and examination shows
impaired muscle strength. It can help to
differentiate primary muscle conditions
from muscle weakness caused by neurologic
disorders.
Normal Values
Muscle tissue is normally electrically
silent at rest. Once the insertion activity
(caused by the trauma of needle insertion)
quiets down, there should be no action potential
on the oscilloscope. When the muscle is
voluntarily contracted, action potentials
begin to appear. As contraction is increased,
more and more muscle fibers produce action
potentials until a disorderly group of action
potentials of varying rates and amplitudes
(complete recruitment and interference pattern)
appears with full contraction.
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