PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Electrical activity and fatigue of respiratory and locomotor muscles in obstructive respiratory diseases during field walking test.

  • Jéssica D Cavalcanti,
  • Guilherme Augusto F Fregonezi,
  • Antonio J Sarmento,
  • Thiago Bezerra,
  • Lucien P Gualdi,
  • Francesca Pennati,
  • Andrea Aliverti,
  • Vanessa R Resqueti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266365
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 4
p. e0266365

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionIn subjects with obstructive respiratory diseases the increased work of breathing during exercise can trigger greater recruitment and fatigue of respiratory muscles. Associated with these changes, lower limb muscle dysfunctions, further contribute to exercise limitations. We aimed to assess electrical activity and fatigue of two respiratory and one locomotor muscle during Incremental Shuttle Walking Test (ISWT) in individuals with obstructive respiratory diseases and compare with healthy.MethodsThis is a case-control study. Seventeen individuals with asthma (asthma group) and fifteen with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD group) were matched with healthy individuals (asthma and COPD control groups). Surface electromyographic (sEMG) activity of sternocleidomastoid (SCM), scalene (ESC), and rectus femoris (RF) were recorded during ISWT. sEMG activity was analyzed in time and frequency domains at baseline and during the test (33%, 66%, and 100% of ISWT total time) to obtain, respectively, signal amplitude and power spectrum density (EMG median frequency [MF], high- and low-frequency bands, and high/low [H/L] ratio).ResultsAsthma group walked a shorter distance than controls (p = 0.0007). sEMG amplitudes of SCM, ESC, and RF of asthma and COPD groups were higher at 33% and 66% of ISWT compared with controls groups (all pConclusionReduced performance is accompanied by increased electromyographic activity of SCM and ESC and activation of RF in individuals with obstructive respiratory diseases during ISWT. These are susceptible to be more pronounced respiratory and peripheral muscle fatigue than healthy subjects during exercise.