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LEMG
Highlights Overview Why It's Done What It's Like Understanding the Results Risks and Complications

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LEMG: Understanding the Results

What do the LEMG results mean?
Overview

LEMG can give specific information on whether nerve function to the voice box muscle being studied is intact (normal), partially intact (as in paresis), or absent (as in paralysis).

  • LEMG results, together with the results of other tests and clinical examinations, will be used to determine whether nerve inputs to muscles involved in voice, breathing, or swallowing disorders are present or absent, and (if present) normal or abnormal.
  • The results may also indicate that more medical tests are necessary before a diagnosis and treatment plan can be developed.

LEMG is analyzed according to five parameters:

  • Insertional activity
  • Spontaneous activity
  • Recruitment
  • Waveform morphology
  • Synkinesis

Five-Point Analysis on LEMG

Parameter Definition Information

1. Insertional activity

Electrical discharges when needle is inserted into the muscle

Normal: Bursts of discharge last only less than several hundred milliseconds

Abnormal: Bursts are longer or shorter than normal

2. Spontaneous activity

Electrical discharges recorded while a muscle is at rest (no talking, no swallowing)

Normal: No electrical activity in muscle at rest (except when close to a connection between nerve and muscle in study)

Abnormal: If present, indicates abnormality (except when resting muscle is NOT completely relaxed)

3. Waveform morphology (on voluntary activity)

Size, shape, timing pattern of electrical activity during voice tasks

Normal: Specific size, shape, timing, and duration of electrical activity

Abnormal: Decreased size; waveform shape complex or polyphasic; timing; altered duration of electrical signals

4. Recruitment (during voluntary activity)

Increase of electrical activity as patient increases force of muscle contraction

Normal: Increased effort of muscle contraction results in inclusion (recruitment) of other motor units, hence increased electrical activity, until all electrical signals blend

Abnormal: Abnormal or decreased recruitment patterns

5. Synkinesis ("crossed wires")

Electrical activity is recorded in a muscle that is not active during a particular task

Abnormal: Presence of synkinesis NOT a normal finding

  • "crossed wires": wrong muscle moves at the wrong time
  • may develop when nerves regenerate in an abnormal way

Other abnormal patterns

Examination of other abnormal patterns of muscle activity during voluntary contraction is also performed. For example, detection of regular, rhythmic bursts of electrical activity during a sustained contraction may indicate a tremor.

These findings, taken together, can help pinpoint the cause of the voice disorder, indicate the need for further testing, and/or suggest a certain treatment strategy.

For example, the table below shows what LEMG results would most likely indicate in a patient with a non-moving vocal fold:
Spontaneous Activity Recruitment Waveform Shape Interpretation in Patient With Voice Disorder With Non-moving Vocal Fold

Absent

Normal

Normal size, shape, pattern

Normal nerve input to voice box muscle tested: Cause of vocal fold immobility not due to paralysis of said muscle

Absent

Reduced

"Nascent": small size, long duration, complex shapes

Reinnervation present: Recovery is ongoing and likely; "hold" on intervention

Absent

Reduced

"Giant": large size, long duration

Old injury: Spontaneous further recovery unlikely; decide on intervention

Present

Absent

Fibrillations, positive waves, complex repetitive discharges

Denervation ongoing: Medical consultation is necessary to determine cause of denervation

 

AlertAdvisory Note

Patient education material presented here does not substitute for medical consultation or examination, nor is this material intended to provide advice on the medical treatment appropriate to any specific circumstances.

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