Malouin F, Simard T
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1978 Mar;59(3):144-51.
Effects of vibratory stimulation and maximal isometric contraction on a fine motor control task were evaluated in 17 human subjects. Electromyographic audiovisual feedback cues derived from two fine-wire bipolar electrodes, inserted to a depth of 12 and 6 mm respectively, were used to train the subjects to isolate a motor unit in the extensor carpi radialis brevis muscle. A specially designed compressed air driven vibrator providing vibratory stimulation with an amplitude of 2 mm and a frequency range of 120-160 cycles per second was applied to the muscle tendon. A significant decrease was found in the subjects; ability to isolate the pretest motor unit during and after continuous and interrupted periods of vibration and following a maximal isometric contraction of the extensor carpi radials brevis muscle. Individual variations in the subjects' responses to the forms of application of the vibratory stimulus, electrode preference and feedback specificity were observed. Results suggest that marked spatial recruitment of motor units, brought into action by the vibration stimulus or by the maximal isometric contraction, interfered with inhibitory mechanisms necessary to achieve isolation and control of a single motor unit. A therapeutic application of vibration, based on the marked spatial recruitment observed during and after vibration, is proposed for muscle reeducation.