Revisiting the compound muscle action potential (CMAP)
•This is a comprehensive review of the compound muscle action potential (CMAP) that examines the history of the waveform and its terminology.•Generation of the signal is discussed, including factors affecting the signal both biological (e.g., temperature, age, etc.) and instrumentation (i.e., electr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical neurophysiology practice 2024-01, Vol.9, p.176-200 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •This is a comprehensive review of the compound muscle action potential (CMAP) that examines the history of the waveform and its terminology.•Generation of the signal is discussed, including factors affecting the signal both biological (e.g., temperature, age, etc.) and instrumentation (i.e., electrodes, instrumentation settings, etc.).•Expected CMAP findings in common neuromuscular disorders are covered as well as advanced techniques in the use of CMAPs in research.
The compound muscle action potential (CMAP) is among the first recorded waveforms in clinical neurography and one of the most common in clinical use. It is derived from the summated muscle fiber action potentials recorded from a surface electrode overlying the studied muscle following stimulation of the relevant motor nerve fibres innervating the muscle. Surface recorded motor unit potentials (SMUPs) are the fundamental units comprising the CMAP. Because it is considered a basic, if not banal signal, what it represents is often underappreciated. In this review we discuss current concepts in the anatomy and physiology of the CMAP. These have evolved with advances in instrumentation and digitization of signals, affecting its quantitation and measurement.
It is important to understand the basic technical and biological factors influencing the CMAP. If these influences are not recognized, then a suboptimal recording may result. The object is to obtain a high quality CMAP recording that is reproducible, whether the study is done for clinical or research purposes.
The initial sections cover the relevant CMAP anatomy and physiology, followed by how these principles are applied to CMAP changes in neuromuscular disorders. The concluding section is a brief overview of CMAP research where advances in recording systems and computer-based analysis programs have opened new research applications. One such example is motor unit number estimation (MUNE) that is now being used as a surrogate marker in monitoring chronic neurogenic processes such as motor neuron diseases. |
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ISSN: | 2467-981X 2467-981X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cnp.2024.04.002 |