Volume 13, Issue 2 pp. 165-171
Article
Full Access

Electromyographic and morphological functional compensation in late poliomyelitis

Gisli Einarsson MD

Gisli Einarsson MD

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Gothenburg University, Sweden

Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Uppsala University, Sweden

Search for more papers by this author
Dr. Gunnar Grimby MD

Corresponding Author

Dr. Gunnar Grimby MD

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Gothenburg University, Sweden

Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Uppsala University, Sweden

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Sahlgren Hospital, 5-413 45 Göteborg, SwedenSearch for more papers by this author
Erik Stålberg MD

Erik Stålberg MD

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Gothenburg University, Sweden

Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Uppsala University, Sweden

Search for more papers by this author
First published: February 1990
Citations: 66

Abstract

Patients with prior poliomyelitis may experience muscle function deterioration decades after onset of disease. The present study is aimed at describing electromyographic and morphometric evidence of muscular compensation and of on-going muscular instability. Ten subjects 42–62 years of age with onset of polio 25–52 years earlier were studied with macro EMG, single-fiber EMG (SFEMG), muscle strength measurement, and morphometrical analysis of muscle biopsies from the vastus lateralis muscle. SFEMG revealed increased fiber density (FD) and large macro-MUP potentials indicating pronounced reinnervation as compensation to loss of motor neurons. From electrophysiological data of motor unit size, morphometric measures of fiber size, and muscle strength data, the minimal degree of motor neuron loss was estimated to be greater than 70%.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

click me