Wavelet Analysis of Respiratory Muscle sEMG Signals during the Physiological Breakpoint of Static Dry End-Expiratory Breath-Holding in Naive Apneists: A Pilot Study

Author:

Mišić Nataša Ž.1ORCID,Ostojić Mirko1ORCID,Cvetković Saša1ORCID,Miodragović Petar2,Aničić Zdravko3ORCID,Kovačić Popović Anita4ORCID,Stefanović Đorđe5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Computational Bioengineering, Research & Development Institute Lola Ltd., 11030 Belgrade, Serbia

2. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Novi Sad, 21137 Novi Sad, Serbia

3. Laboratory of Methodology and Research, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Belgrade, 11030 Belgrade, Serbia

4. Department of Defectology and Clinical Psychology, Medika College for Vocational Studies in Healthcare, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

5. Department for Basic Sports, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Belgrade, 11030 Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

The wavelet spectral characteristics of three respiratory muscle signals (scalenus (SC), parasternal intercostal (IC), and rectus abdominis (RA)) and one locomotor muscle (brachioradialis (BR)) were analyzed in the time–frequency (T-F) domain during voluntary breath-holding (BH), with a focus on the physiological breakpoint that is commonly considered the first involuntary breathing movement (IBM) that signals the end of the easy-going phase of BH. The study was performed for an end-expiratory BH physiological breaking point maneuver on twelve healthy, physically active, naive breath-holders/apneists (six professional athletes; six recreational athletes, and two individuals in the post-COVID-19 period) using surface electromyography (sEMG). We observed individual effects that were dependent on muscle oxygenation and each person’s fitness, which were consistent with the mechanism of motor unit (MU) recruitment and the transition of slow-twitch oxidative (type 1) to fast-twitch glycolytic (type 2) muscle fibers. Professional athletes had longer BH durations (BHDs) and strong hypercapnic responses regarding the expiratory RA muscle, which is activated abruptly at higher BHDs in a person-specific range below 250 Hz and is dependent on the BHD. This is in contrast with recreational athletes, who had strong hypoxic responses regarding inspiratory IC muscle, which is activated faster and gradually in the frequency range of 250–450 Hz (independent of the person and BHD). This pilot study preliminarily indicates that it is possible to noninvasively assess the physiological characteristics of skeletal muscles, especially oxygenation, and improve physical fitness tests by determining the T-F features of elevated myoelectric IC and RA activity during BH.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Science, and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

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