What is electrodiagnostic testing used for? Who typically performs these tests?
What are the major purposes of nerve conduction velocity tests?
NCV – nerve conduction velocity
- Helps diagnose nerve damage or disease
- Measurement of how well electrical signals (Aps) travel up/down peripheral nerves
- Evaluates the peripheral nerve in its entirety
What are the major purposes of electromyography?
EMG – electromyography
- Determines myopathic involvement
- Measurement of how muscles respond to electrical signals (Aps) both during rest and with activity
- Looks at the muscle belly and neuromuscular junction
What information does NCV/EMG provide?
What nerves do we test? Why?
Large diameter myelinated nerves
Easier to zap and easier to measure due to myelin
In the motor nerve conduction testing portion of NCVs, what are CMAPs?
In the sensory nerve conduction testing portion of NCVs, what are SNAPs?
In the motor and sensory conduction tests, what is latency?
In the motor and sensory conduction tests, what is conduction velocity and how is it determined?
What is the difference between orthodromic and antidromic testing?
When are F wave tests performed? How do they work?
F-wave
- Retrograde “rebound” motor impulse – travels full length of motor axon and back (rebounds at anterior horn)
- Used to evaluate proximal damage and demyelination (GBS, radiculopathy, peripheral neuropathies)
When are H-reflex tests performed? How do they work?
H-wave
- Used to evaluate radiculopathy
- Follows muscle stretch reflex arc – goes all the way to spinal cord
- Can help in evaluation of nerve root lesions and UPPER motor neuro lesions (spinal cord)
What are some of the basic interpretations that can be made within a NCV study? (3 definitions)
What is the conduction velocity when large, fast-conducting fibers are lost?
moderate slowing
What is the conduction velocity during demyelination?
marked slowing
What types of pathology are EMGs most helpful in diagnosing?
Conditions that interfere with MUSCULAR CONTRACTION
- Diseases that affect the muscle (muscular dystrophies)
- Diseases that affect the neuromuscular junction (myasthenia gravis)
- Diffuse nerve disorders that cause peripheral neuropathies
- Disorders that affect the motor neurons (anterior horn cells) in the spinal cord (ALS, ruptured spinal disc)
Explain what a motor unit action potential is, and how its relevant to EMGs.
What is considered normal muscle activity surrounding insertional activity?
What does a decrease in normal insertional activity mean?
associated with loss of muscle fibers or metabolic disease
What does an increase in normal insertional activity mean?
associated with neuropathic or myopathic disorders
What does a prolonged insertional activity mean?
post-acute denervation, inflammatory muscle disorders, muscular dystrophy
What is considered normal versus abnormal muscle activity at rest?
What 3 things determine speed of AP?
What are limitations to electrodiagnostic testing?