Reflex changes in muscle spindle discharge during a voluntary contraction
A. M. Aniss, S. C. Gandevia and D. Burke Department of Neurology, Prince Henry Hospital, Sydney, Australia. 1. This study was undertaken to determine whether low-threshold cutaneous and muscle afferents from mechanoreceptors in the foot reflexly affect fusimotor neurons innervating the plantar and d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1988-03, Vol.59 (3), p.908-921 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A. M. Aniss, S. C. Gandevia and D. Burke
Department of Neurology, Prince Henry Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
1. This study was undertaken to determine whether low-threshold cutaneous
and muscle afferents from mechanoreceptors in the foot reflexly affect
fusimotor neurons innervating the plantar and dorsiflexors of the ankle
during voluntary contractions. 2. Recordings were made from 29 identified
muscle spindle afferents innervating triceps surae and the pretibial
flexors. Trains of electrical stimuli (5 stimuli, 300 impulses per second)
were delivered to the sural nerve at the ankle (intensity: 2-4 times
sensory threshold) and to the posterior tibial nerve at the ankle
(intensity: 1.5-3 times motor threshold for the small muscles of the foot).
The stimuli were delivered while the subject maintained an isometric
voluntary contraction of the receptor-bearing muscle, sufficient to
accelerate the discharge of each spindle ending. This ensured that the
fusimotor neurons directed to the ending were active and influencing the
spindle discharge. The effects of these stimuli on muscle spindle discharge
were assessed using raster displays, frequencygrams, poststimulus time
histograms (PSTHs) and cumulative sums ("CUSUMs") of the PSTHs. Reflex
effects onto alpha-motoneurons were determined from poststimulus changes in
the averaged rectified electromyogram (EMG). Reflex effects of these
stimuli onto single-motor units were assessed in separate experiments using
PSTHs and CUSUMs. 3. Electrical stimulation of the sural or posterior
tibial nerves at nonnoxious levels had no significant effect on the
discharge of the 14 spindle endings in the pretibial flexor muscles. The
electrical stimuli also produced no significant change in discharge of 11
of 15 spindle endings in triceps surae. With the remaining four endings in
triceps surae, the overall change in discharge appeared to be an increase
for two endings (at latencies of 60 and 68 ms) and a decrease for two
endings (at latencies of 110 and 150 ms). The difference in the incidence
of the responses of spindle endings in tibialis anterior and in triceps
surae was significant (P less than 0.05, chi 2 test). 4. For both triceps
surae and pretibial flexor muscles the electrical stimuli to sural or
posterior tibial nerves had clear effects on the alpha-motoneuron pool,
whether assessed using surface EMG or the discharge of single-motor units.
Based on EMG recordings using intramuscular wire electrodes, the reflex
effects diffe |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1988.59.3.908 |