Directional tuning of human forearm muscle afferents during voluntary wrist movements
Single unit activity was recorded with the microneurography technique from sixteen spindle afferents and one Golgi tendon organ afferent originating from the forearm extensor muscles. Impulse rates were studied while subjects performed unobstructed aiming movements at the wrist in eight different di...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2001-10, Vol.536 (2), p.635-647 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Single unit activity was recorded with the microneurography technique from sixteen spindle afferents and one Golgi tendon
organ afferent originating from the forearm extensor muscles. Impulse rates were studied while subjects performed unobstructed
aiming movements at the wrist in eight different directions 45 deg apart. In addition, similar imposed movements were performed
while the subject was instructed to remain relaxed. Movement amplitudes were about 5 deg and the speed 10â30 deg s â1 . Joint movements were translated to movements of a cursor on a monitor to provide visual feedback.
Individual spindle afferents modulated their activity over a number of targets, i.e. were broadly tuned, during these aiming
movements. The preferred direction for a spindle afferent was the same during both passive and active movements, indicating
that the fusimotor effects associated with active contractions had little or no effect on the direction of tuning.
The direction of tuning of individual spindle afferents could be predicted from the biomechanically inferred length changes
of the parent muscle. Thus spindle afferents responded as stretch receptors, i.e. impulse rates increased with lengthening
and decreased with shortening, in active as well as passive movements.
Spindles from muscles, which continuously counteracted gravity exhibited a stretch response and directional tuning during
the phase of movement alone whereas their position sensitivity was poor. In contrast, spindle afferents from the muscles that
had no or minimal antigravity role were directionally tuned during both the dynamic and the static phase of the aiming task
and their position sensitivity was substantially higher.
In spite of the limited data base from three extensor muscles it could be demonstrated that wrist joint position was remarkably
well encoded in the ensemble muscle spindle data. In some cases the ensemble muscle spindle data encoded the instantaneous
trajectory of movement as well. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.2001.0635c.xd |