Volume 14, Issue 3 , Pages 219-226, July 2010
The use of surface electromyography for the study of auricular acupuncture☆
Summary
The advancement of knowledge in neurophysiology has demonstrated that acupuncture is a method of peripheral neural stimulation that promotes local and systemic reflexive responses. The purpose of this study was to determine if surface electromyography can be used as a tool to study the action of auricular acupuncture on striated skeletal muscle. The electromyographic amplitudes of the anterior, middle and posterior deltoid muscle and the upper trapezium muscle with 20%, 40% and 60% of maximal voluntary contraction of 15 healthy volunteers, were analyzed after the individuals were submitted to the auricular acupuncture treatment. The non-parametric Friedman test was used to compare Root Mean Square values estimated by using a 200
ms moving window. Significant results were further analyzed using the Wilcoxon signed rank test. In this exploratory study, the level of significance of each comparison was set to p
<
0.05. It was concluded in this study that a surface electromyography can be used as a tool to investigate possible alterations of electrical activity in muscles after auricular acupuncture. However there is still a lack of adequate methodology for its use in this type of study, being that the method used to record the electromyographic signal can also influence the results.
Keywords: Electromyography, Auricular acupuncture, Neurophysiology
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☆ Work accomplished at the State University of Campinas–UNICAMP, Institute of Biology, Department of Anatomy.
PII: S1360-8592(08)00198-8
doi:10.1016/j.jbmt.2008.11.006
© 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Volume 14, Issue 3 , Pages 219-226, July 2010
