4.6 Article

A Wearable, Multi-Frequency Device to Measure Muscle Activity Combining Simultaneous Electromyography and Electrical Impedance Myography

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22051941

Keywords

electrical impedance myography; bioimpedance; electromyogram; sensor fusion; muscle force; wearables; hardware design; multi-frequency

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [LE 817/41-1]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basis Research [20-58-12006]

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This paper introduces a device that performs simultaneous EMG and EIM to provide more robust measurement of muscle conditions. The device is lightweight, wearable, wireless, and modular, allowing for accurate assessment of muscle contraction and force by measuring changes in electrical impedance and capturing the EMG signal.
The detection of muscle contraction and the estimation of muscle force are essential tasks in robot-assisted rehabilitation systems. The most commonly used method to investigate muscle contraction is surface electromyography (EMG), which, however, shows considerable disadvantages in predicting the muscle force, since unpredictable factors may influence the detected force but not necessarily the EMG data. Electrical impedance myography (EIM) investigates the change in electrical impedance during muscle activities and is another promising technique to investigate muscle functions. This paper introduces the design, development, and evaluation of a device that performs EMG and EIM simultaneously for more robust measurement of muscle conditions subject to artifacts. The device is light, wearable, and wireless and has a modular design, in which the EMG, EIM, micro-controller, and communication modules are stacked and interconnected through connectors. As a result, the EIM module measures the bioimpedance between 20 and 200 omega with an error of less than 5% at 140 SPS. The settling time during the calibration phase of this module is less than 1000 ms. The EMG module captures the spectrum of the EMG signal between 20-150 Hz at 1 kSPS with an SNR of 67 dB. The micro-controller and communication module builds an ARM-Cortex M3 micro-controller which reads and transfers the captured data every 1 ms over RF (868 Mhz) with a baud rate of 500 kbps to a receptor connected to a PC. Preliminary measurements on a volunteer during leg extension, walking, and sit-to-stand showed the potential of the system to investigate muscle function by combining simultaneous EMG and EIM.

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