Nociceptive fingertip stimulation inhibits synergistic motoneuron pools in the human upper limb

Activation of distinct muscle groups organized in a stereotyped manner ("muscle synergies") is thought to underlie the production of movement by the vertebrate spinal cord. This results in movement with minimum effort and maximum efficiency. The question of how the vertebrate nervous syste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurology 2000-11, Vol.55 (9), p.1305-1309
Hauptverfasser: LEIS, A. A, STOKIC, D. S, FUHR, P, KOFLER, M, KRONENBERG, M. F, WISSEL, J, GLOCKER, F. X, SEIFERT, C, STETKAROVA, I
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container_end_page 1309
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1305
container_title Neurology
container_volume 55
creator LEIS, A. A
STOKIC, D. S
FUHR, P
KOFLER, M
KRONENBERG, M. F
WISSEL, J
GLOCKER, F. X
SEIFERT, C
STETKAROVA, I
description Activation of distinct muscle groups organized in a stereotyped manner ("muscle synergies") is thought to underlie the production of movement by the vertebrate spinal cord. This results in movement with minimum effort and maximum efficiency. The question of how the vertebrate nervous system inhibits ongoing muscle activity is central to the study of the neural control of movement. To investigate the strategy used by the human spinal cord to rapidly inhibit muscle activation in the upper limb. The authors performed a series of experiments in 10 healthy subjects to assess the effect of nociceptive cutaneous stimulation on voluntarily contracting upper limb muscles. They recorded the electromyogram (EMG) with surface electrodes placed over various upper limb muscles. The authors found evidence of a simple inhibitory strategy that 1) was dependent on the intensity of the stimulus, 2) was maximally evoked when stimulation was applied to the fingertips, 3) preceded the earliest onset of voluntary muscle relaxation, and 4) produced inhibition of EMG activity in specific upper limb muscle groups. Nociceptive fingertip stimulation preferentially inhibited contraction of synergistic muscles involved in reaching and grasping (intrinsic hand muscles, forearm flexors, triceps) while having little effect on biceps or deltoid. Neural circuitry within the human spinal cord is organized to inhibit movement by rapidly deactivating muscles that constitute distinct muscle synergies. This strategy of selective and concurrent deactivation of the same basic elements that produce synergistic movement greatly simplifies motor control.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Arm - physiology
Biological and medical sciences
Central nervous system
Electromyography
Electrophysiology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Hand - physiology
Humans
Male
Motor Neurons - physiology
Muscles - physiology
Nociceptors - physiology
Physical Stimulation
Spinal Cord - physiology
Vertebrates: nervous system and sense organs
title Nociceptive fingertip stimulation inhibits synergistic motoneuron pools in the human upper limb
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