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Single motor unit variability with threshold stimulation in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and normal subjects
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Single motor unit variability with threshold stimulation in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and normal subjects

Devanand Jillapalli and Jeremy M Shefner
Muscle & nerve, Vol.30(5), pp.578-584
11/2004
PMID: 15452842

Abstract

Adult Aged Aged, 80 and over Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis - physiopathology Electric Stimulation - methods Electromyography - methods Electromyography - statistics & numerical data Female Humans Male Middle Aged Muscle, Skeletal - physiology Muscle, Skeletal - physiopathology Sensory Thresholds - physiology
Repetitive nerve stimulation often shows responses with an abnormal decrement in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), suggesting instability of the neuromuscular junction; however, the pathophysiology and response characteristics of this instability are not clear. We evaluated response variability of 47 single motor units from 16 patients with ALS and 51 units from 10 normal subjects, acquired by delivering threshold stimuli sporadically at 0.5 HZ or less. In addition, in 46 other different single motor units obtained from 21 patients with ALS, variability was studied at both 1- and 3-HZ stimulation rates. Motor units from patients with ALS were significantly more variable than those from normal subjects, even when their larger amplitude was accounted for. This increased variability was not rate dependent. Response variability is a critical measure in the statistical method of motor unit number estimation and is attributed to variability in the number of units activated; the fact that variability of single motor units varies with disease state may be a potentially confounding factor in the application of the technique.

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