The influence of the reference electrode location on the M-wave characteristics in the quadriceps

J Electromyogr Kinesiol. 2022 Oct:66:102681. doi: 10.1016/j.jelekin.2022.102681. Epub 2022 Jul 16.

Abstract

Introduction: In the compound muscle action potential (M wave) recorded using the belly-tendon configuration, the contribution of the tendon electrode is assumed to be negligible compared to the belly electrode. We tested this assumption by placing the reference electrode at a distant (contralateral) site, which allowed separate recording of the belly and tendon contributions.

Methods: M waves were recorded at multiple selected sites over the right quadriceps heads and lower leg using two different locations for the reference electrode: the ipsilateral (right) and contralateral (left) patellar tendon. The general parameters of the M wave (amplitude, area, duration, latency, and frequency) were measured.

Results: (1) The tendon potential had a small amplitude (<30%) compared to the belly potential; (2) Changing the reference electrode from the ipsilateral to the contralateral patella produced moderate changes in the M wave recorded over the innervation zone, these changes affecting significantly the amplitude of the M-wave second phase (p = 0.006); (3) Using the contralateral reference system allowed recording of short-latency components occurring immediately after the stimulus artefact, which had the same latency and amplitude (p = 0.18 and 0.25, respectively) at all recording sites over the leg.

Conclusions: The potential recorded at the "tendon" site after femoral nerve stimulation is small (compared to the belly potential), but not negligible, and makes a significant contribution to the second phase of belly-tendon M wave. Adopting a distant (contralateral) reference allowed recording of far-field components that may aid in the understanding of the electrical formation of the M wave.

Keywords: Active electrode; Belly-tendon configuration; Compound muscle action potential; Far-field potentials; M wave; Reference electrode; Volume conduction.

MeSH terms

  • Electrodes
  • Humans
  • Leg
  • Muscle, Skeletal* / physiology
  • Quadriceps Muscle
  • Tendons* / physiology