Neuromuscular
electrical stimulation and voluntary exercise.Hainaut
K, Duchateau J.
Laboratory of Biology, Universite Libre de Bruxelles,
Belgium.
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) has
been in practice since the eighteenth century
for the treatment of paralysed patients and the
prevention and/or restoration of muscle function
after injuries, before patients are capable of
voluntary exercise training. More recently NMES
has been used as a modality of strengthening in
healthy subjects and highly trained athletes,
but it is not clear whether NMES is a substitute
for, or a complement to, voluntary exercise training.
Moreover the discussion of the mechanisms which
underly the specific effects of NMES appears rather
complex at least in part because of the disparity
in training protocols, electrical stimulation
regimens and testing procedures that are used
in the various studies. It appears from this review
of the literature that in physical therapy, NMES
effectively retards muscle wasting during denervation
or immobilisation and optimises recovery of muscle
strength during rehabilitation. It is also effective
in athletes with injured, painful limbs, since
NMES contributes to a shortened rehabilitation
time and aids a safe return to competition. In
healthy muscles, NMES appears to be a complement
to voluntary training because it specifically
induces the activity of large motor units which
are more difficult to activate during voluntary
contraction. However, there is a consensus that
the force increases induced by NMES are similar
to, but not greater than, those induced by voluntary
training. The rationale for the complementarity
between NMES and voluntary exercise is that in
voluntary contractions motor units are recruited
in order, from smaller fatigue resistant (type
I) units to larger quickly fatiguable (type II)
units, whereas in NMES the sequence appears to
be reversed. As a training modality NMES is, in
nonextreme situations such as muscle denervation,
not a substitute for, but a complement of, voluntary
exercise of disused and healthy muscles.
PMID: 1509225 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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