Summary
A thin nichrome wire served as an electrode for the EMG lead; one end of the wire was introduced into the tissue of the muscle to be investigated, and the other was immersed in a rubber capsule filled with an electrically conducting paste; the capsule remained under the skin of the neck. A needleelectrode connected to an amplifier was introduced into the capsule in order to record the EMG through the skin.
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Literature Cited
T. I. Goryunova, Fiziol. zh. SSSR, No. 12 (1958), p. 1160.
L. V. Kantorovich, Electromyographic Studies of Alteration to the Innervation of Anatognist Muscles by Transplantation of the Tendon of the Muscle. Candidate's dissertation. Leningrad (1951).
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M. Ya. Chirskov, In the book: Contributions to the Second Scientific Session of the Central Scientific Research Institute of the Application and Construction of Prostheses [in Russian], Moscow (1952), p. 49.
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Oganisyan, A.A., Ivanova, S.N. A new method of implanting electrodes in the muscles of the limbs of dogs to record the electrogram under conditions of free movement. Bull Exp Biol Med 57, 513–515 (1964). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00782529
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00782529