To better evaluate neuromuscular function of patients with stroke related motor dysfunction, we proposed an effective corticomuscular coherence analysis and coherent significant judgment method. Firstly, the related functional frequency bands in the electroencephalogram (EEG) were extracted via wavelet decomposition. Secondly, coherence were analysed between surface electromyography (sEMG) and sub-bands extracted from EEG. Further more, a coherent significant indicator was defined to quantitatively describe the similarity in certain frequency domain and phase lock activity between EEG and sEMG. Through the analysis of corticomuscular coherence during knee flexion-extension of stroke patients and healthy controls, we found that the stroke patients exhibited significantly lower gamma-band corticomuscular coherence in performing the task with their affected leg, and there was no statistically significant difference between their unaffected lag and the healthy controls, but with the rehabilitation training, the bilateral difference of corticomuscular coherence in patients decreased gradually.
For the questions of deeply researching abnormal neuromuscular coupling and better evaluating motor function of stroke patients with motor dysfunction, an effective intermuscular coherence analysis method and index are studied to explore the neuromuscular oscillation and the pathomechanism of motor dysfunction, based on which an assessment standard of muscle function is established. Firstly, the contrastive analysis about the intermuscular coherence of antagonistic muscle of affected and intact upper limbs of stroke patients was conducted. Secondly, a significant indicator of Fisher's Z-transformed coherence significant indicator was defined to quantitatively describe the coupling differences in certain functional frequency domain between surface electromyogram (sEMG) of affected and intact sides. Further more, the relationship between intermuscular coherence and motor task was studied. Through the analysis of intermuscular coherence during elbow flexion-extension of affected and intact sides, we found that the intermuscular coherence was associated with motor task and the stroke patients exhibited significantly lower beta-band intermuscular coherence in performing the task with their affected upper limbs. More conclusion can be drawn that beta-band intermuscular coherence has been found concerned with Fugle-Meyer scale, which indicates that beta-band intermuscular coherence could be an index assisting in evaluating motor function of patients.