Comparison of F Wave and H Wave on Spastic Hand

We have studied the ratio on max. H/M and max. F/M in 20 hemiplegics respectively over the involved and non-involved arms. Each wave was recorded from abductor digiti minimi, and 16 consecutive stimuli were applied to each side of each subject. In 12 hemiplegics with a disused arm, amplitude H/M rat...

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Published inOrthopedics & Traumatology Vol. 35; no. 1; pp. 237 - 239
Main Authors Kawai, Masayuki, Hiratsuka, Hiroyuki, Sagara, Kozo, Kawai, Takashi, Tomonaga, Seigo, Inoue, Yoshihiro, Hirano, Eiji, Mako, Yasuji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published West-Japanese Society of Orthopedics & Traumatology 1986
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ISSN0037-1033
1349-4333
DOI10.5035/nishiseisai.35.237

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Summary:We have studied the ratio on max. H/M and max. F/M in 20 hemiplegics respectively over the involved and non-involved arms. Each wave was recorded from abductor digiti minimi, and 16 consecutive stimuli were applied to each side of each subject. In 12 hemiplegics with a disused arm, amplitude H/M ratio was found to be significantly higher on the spastic than on the non-involved side. There proved to be a stastically significant association between amplitude H/M ratio and duration H/M ratio (r=0.75, p<0.05). Amplitude F/M ratio was only slightly higher on the spastic than on the normal side. The results indicate that H/M ratio expressed the proportion of anterior motoneuron pool to be excited better than F/M ratio and that 10 consecutive stimuli were enough to get a methodologic convenience. The H reflex might play a more important role than the F wave to evaluate as an index of the spastic state.
ISSN:0037-1033
1349-4333
DOI:10.5035/nishiseisai.35.237