Reflex influences on muscle spindle activity in relaxed human leg muscles
S. C. Gandevia, S. Miller, A. M. Aniss and D. Burke The study was designed to determine whether low-threshold cutaneous and muscle afferents from the foot reflexly activate gamma-motoneurons innervating relaxed muscles of the leg. In 15 experiments multiunit recordings were made from 21 nerve fascic...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1986-07, Vol.56 (1), p.159-170 |
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Zusammenfassung: | S. C. Gandevia, S. Miller, A. M. Aniss and D. Burke
The study was designed to determine whether low-threshold cutaneous and
muscle afferents from the foot reflexly activate gamma-motoneurons
innervating relaxed muscles of the leg. In 15 experiments multiunit
recordings were made from 21 nerve fascicles innervating triceps surae or
tibialis anterior. In a further nine experiments the activity of 19
identified single muscle spindle afferents was recorded, 13 from triceps
surae, 5 from tibialis anterior, and 1 from extensor digitorum longus.
Trains of electrical stimuli (5 stimuli, 300 Hz) were delivered to the
sural nerve at the ankle (intensity, twice sensory threshold) and the
posterior tibial nerve at the ankle (intensity, 1.1 times motor threshold
for the small muscles of the foot). In addition, a tap on the appropriate
tendon at varying times after the stimuli was used to assess the dynamic
responsiveness of the afferents under study. The conditioning electrical
stimuli did not change the discharge of single spindle afferents.
Recordings of rectified and averaged multiunit activity also revealed no
change in the overall level of background neural activity following the
electrical stimuli. The afferent responses to tendon taps did not differ
significantly whether or not they were preceded by stimulation of the sural
or posterior tibial nerves. These results suggest that low-threshold
afferents from the foot do not produce significant activation of fusimotor
neurons in relaxed leg muscles, at least as judged by their ability to
alter the discharge of muscle spindle afferents. As there may be no
effective background activity in fusimotor neurons innervating relaxed
human muscles, it is possible that these inputs from the foot could
influence the fusimotor system during voluntary contractions when the
fusimotor neurons have been brought to firing threshold. In one subject
trains of stimuli were delivered to the posterior tibial nerve at painful
levels (30 times motor threshold). They produced an acceleration of the
discharge of a spindle in soleus at a latency of approximately 125 ms, in
advance of detectable activity in skeletomotor neurons and before an
increase in muscle length was noted. It presumably resulted from activation
of gamma-motoneurons innervating soleus by small myelinated afferents
(A-delta range). |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1986.56.1.159 |