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Resumen de Influence of voluntary contractions on the basal sEMG activity of the pelvic floor muscles

M. Albaladejo Belmonte, M. Tarazona, F. J. Nohales, J. Alberola Rubio, J. Garcia Casado

  • Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) is a complex clinical condition that affects many women, being sometimes misdiagnosed or mistreated,which can be treated with the infiltration of botulinum toxin (BoNTA). The pelvic floor musculature (PFM) condition from CPP patients can be assessed by means of surface electromyography (sEMG). The evaluation of the basal activity can help to detect a muscular dysfunction, therefore it is important to ensure that the PFM shows a minimum activation when its sEMG is being analysed. In this study, we recorded the sEMG of 25 women with CPP before and 8, 12 and 24 weeks after their treatment with BoNTA while they performed a protocol of 5 voluntary contractions. The root mean square (RMS) and sample entropy (SampEn) of basal segments pre- (B[PRE]), inter- (B[I]) and post- (B[POST]) contractions of the sEMG were computed and normalized according to the minimum (RMSnorm) and maximum (SampEnorm) of the recording. B(PRE) showed the lowest RMSnorm median both before and after the treatment with BoNTA, which proved that the activity of the PFM is minimum before the first contraction. As for SampEnnorm, although results were not so conclusive, they also indicated that B(PRE) should be taken as a reference to analyse the PFM function at its state of minimum activity. Future works aiming to characterize the effects of BoNTA in PFM by means of sEMG should consider basal segments before contractions to assess basal tone conditions.


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