Muscle twitch thresholds depending on the direction of current stimulation

Acoustic or visual warning signals for workers in hazardous situations might fail under loud and/or lowvisibility work situations. A warning system that uses electrocutaneous stimulation can overcome this problem. This study aimed to compare vertical, diagonal, and horizontal current stimulation dir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dölker Eva-Maria, Haueisen Jens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2024-12-01
Series:Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/cdbme-2024-2047
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Summary:Acoustic or visual warning signals for workers in hazardous situations might fail under loud and/or lowvisibility work situations. A warning system that uses electrocutaneous stimulation can overcome this problem. This study aimed to compare vertical, diagonal, and horizontal current stimulation directions at the upper arm to select the one with the lowest amount of muscle twitching. Fourteen electrodes were attached in two rows to the upper right arm of 15 participants. The stimulation was conducted with bi-phasic rectangular pulses of 150 μs and amplitudes of up to 25 mA. Muscle twitch thresholds have been determined and a circumferential stimulation signal was presented as warning pattern for the three current stimulation directions and evaluated regarding alertness, discomfort, and urgency. For single stimulation pulses, muscle twitches occurred slightly less often at the horizontal stimulation direction compared to the other two and muscle twitch thresholds showed no systematic differences. For the warning patterns, no considerable differences were found regarding the evaluation of alertness, discomfort, and urgency and no differences were found for muscle twitching. In conclusion, all orientations seem suitable for warning pattern presentation and none of the directions has a clear advantage in reducing muscle twitch.
ISSN:2364-5504