Conference publications Next»

Test-retest reliability of the soleus H-reflex is affected by joint positions and force levels

Yungsheng Chen, Southern Cross University
Shi Zhou, Southern Cross University
Colleen M. Cartwright, Southern Cross University
Zachary Crowley, Southern Cross University
Rob Baglin, Southern Cross University
Fang Wang, Beijing Sport University

Abstract

The H-reflex has been extensively used to exam the spinal motoneuron excitability. However, no report has demonstrated the test-retest reliability of the H-reflex assessment during voluntary muscle contractions and its relation to joint positions. The purpose of this study was to determine the test-retest reliability of the soleus (SOL) H-reflex during rest and 10, 30, 50% maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) at the ankle joint angles of neutral (0deg), plantarflexion (20deg), and dorsiflexion (-20deg), respectively in a sitting position.

Ten healthy participants (age 24.9 ± 5 years, height 168.3±8.8 cm, weight 62.7±12.3 kg) were tested for the SOL H-reflex on two separate occasions within 7 days. The SOL H-reflex was elicited by electrical stimulation applied to the posterior tibial nerve. The maximal amplitude of H-reflex wave (Hmax) and M-wave (Mmax) were recorded during rest and three submaximal voluntary contraction levels and at three ankle joint positions in a randomised order. The ratios of Hmvc /Hrest and Hmax/Mmax were also calculated. The Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC2,1, SPSS) was used to examine the test-retest reliability.

Test-retest reliability of the SOL H-reflex during rest was excellent at 0deg (ICC = 0.92) and 20deg plantar flexion (ICC = 0.96) and was good at -20deg dorsiflexion (ICC = 0.75). Inconsistent ICC values were found during submaximal voluntary contractions at three ankle joint positions (range from 0.62 to 0.97), with the highest values observed during 10%MVC (0deg: 0.92, 20deg: 0.93, and -20deg: 0.95). Moderate ICCs were found in Hmax/Mmax (0deg: 0.80, 20deg: 0.92, -20deg: 0.79). A much greater variation in ICC was observed in other comparisons (from -1.66 to 0.977).

In conclusion, repeated measurements of SOL H-reflex demonstrated a high reliability at the neutral and plantar flexion positions than that at the dorsiflexion position during rest. The results also indicated that the SOL H-reflex during 10% MVC was more reliable than that at 30 and 50 %MVC. The reliability of the SOL H-reflex appeared to be significantly affected by levels of voluntary contractions and ankle positions.