Macedo Felipe Soares, da Rocha Adson Ferreira, Miosso Cristiano Jacques, Mateus Sergio Ricardo Menezes
Graduate Program on Medical Sciences, University of Brasília, Brasília, Brazil.
Graduate Program on Biomedical Engineering, University of Brasília, Brasília, Brazil.
Physiother Res Int. 2019 Apr;24(2):e1761. doi: 10.1002/pri.1761. Epub 2018 Dec 13.
Individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI) frequently have an ineffective cough ability due to dysfunctions in expiratory muscles. In such cases, several articles have reported the occurrence of residual muscular activity in muscles that are accessory to coughing. The knowledge about this activity may be useful for building cough assistance devices. The goal of this review is to investigate and to describe the electromyographic signals generated during voluntary coughing in healthy people and in patients with SCI.
Two researchers performed, blindly and independently, a systematic review of the following databases: PubMed, PEDro, LILACS, and Science Direct. We conducted the searches using descriptors in English, Portuguese, and Spanish, with no limitations regarding the publication year. The review included articles describing experiments performed in humans and with the use of electromyographic signals in the analysis of voluntary coughing.
Among the 156 initially found articles, only nine had results that described the study of electromyographic signals associated with voluntary coughing. The results showed evidence that, during voluntary coughing, electromyographic signals are generated both in expiratory and accessory muscles in healthy subjects. In individuals with SCI below the 5th cervical level (C5), the electromyographic signal appeared only in the clavicular portion of the pectoralis major, especially in the explosive cough phase.
Our evaluation of the current literature shows that, according to the analysed studies, the electromyographic signals are more pre-eminent in the expiratory phase of the pectoralis major, during voluntary cough of individuals with SCI (C5-T12).
脊髓损伤(SCI)患者常因呼气肌功能障碍而咳嗽能力不佳。在这种情况下,有几篇文章报道了辅助咳嗽的肌肉中存在残余肌肉活动。了解这种活动可能有助于制造咳嗽辅助装置。本综述的目的是研究和描述健康人和脊髓损伤患者在自主咳嗽过程中产生的肌电信号。
两名研究人员对以下数据库进行了盲法独立系统综述:PubMed、PEDro、LILACS和Science Direct。我们使用英文、葡萄牙文和西班牙文的描述词进行检索,对发表年份没有限制。该综述纳入了描述在人体中进行的实验以及在自主咳嗽分析中使用肌电信号的文章。
在最初找到的156篇文章中,只有9篇的结果描述了与自主咳嗽相关的肌电信号研究。结果表明,在自主咳嗽过程中,健康受试者的呼气肌和辅助肌都会产生肌电信号。在第5颈椎水平(C5)以下的脊髓损伤个体中,肌电信号仅出现在胸大肌的锁骨部分,尤其是在爆发性咳嗽阶段。
我们对当前文献的评估表明,根据分析的研究,在脊髓损伤(C5-T12)个体的自主咳嗽过程中,胸大肌呼气期的肌电信号更为突出。