H-reflex excitability is inhibited in soleus, but not gastrocnemius, at the short-latency response of a horizontal jump-landing task

2016 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cassandra S. Thompson ◽  
Siobhan Schabrun ◽  
Paul W. Marshall
2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 992-1003 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Andrew Pruszynski ◽  
Isaac Kurtzer ◽  
Timothy P. Lillicrap ◽  
Stephen H. Scott

The earliest neural response to a mechanical perturbation, the short-latency stretch response (R1: 20–45 ms), is known to exhibit “automatic gain-scaling” whereby its magnitude is proportional to preperturbation muscle activity. Because gain-scaling likely reflects an intrinsic property of the motoneuron pool (via the size-recruitment principle), counteracting this property poses a fundamental challenge for the nervous system, which must ultimately counter the absolute change in load regardless of the initial muscle activity (i.e., show no gain-scaling). Here we explore the temporal evolution of gain-scaling in a simple behavioral task where subjects stabilize their arm against different background loads and randomly occurring torque perturbations. We quantified gain-scaling in four elbow muscles (brachioradialis, biceps long, triceps lateral, triceps long) over the entire sequence of muscle activity following perturbation onset—the short-latency response, long-latency response (R2: 50–75 ms; R3: 75–105 ms), early voluntary corrections (120–180 ms), and steady-state activity (750–1250 ms). In agreement with previous observations, we found that the short-latency response demonstrated substantial gain-scaling with a threefold increase in background load resulting in an approximately twofold increase in muscle activity for the same perturbation. Following the short-latency response, we found a rapid decrease in gain-scaling starting in the long-latency epoch (∼75-ms postperturbation) such that no significant gain-scaling was observed for the early voluntary corrections or steady-state activity. The rapid decrease in gain-scaling supports our recent suggestion that long-latency responses and voluntary control are inherently linked as part of an evolving sensorimotor control process through similar neural circuitry.


1995 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-145
Author(s):  
Flora Licata ◽  
Guido Li Volsi ◽  
Giuseppe Maugeri ◽  
Francesca Santangelo

The effects of dorsal raphe (DR) electrical stimulation on the neuronal activity of vestibular nuclei were studied in anaesthetized rats. The aim was to establish whether the central systems classically involved in nociceptive functions are able to influence vestibular secondary neurons. DR activation induced modifications of the firing in 70% of the tested neurons, the percentage being similar in the lateral (LVN), superior (SVN), and spinal (SpVN) vestibular nuclei. Three different types of responses were recorded: long-lasting modifications (generally enhancements) of the mean firing rate (43%), short-latency response patterns (14%), both (43%). Short-latency response patterns were more numerous in LVN than in SVN. Iontophoretic applications of 5-HT antagonists Methysergide and Ketanserin blocked long-lasting effects but were scarcely effective on the short-latency response patterns evoked by DR stimulation. It is concluded that DR exerts a double control on secondary vestibular neurons: a generalised excitatory influence by serotoninergic fibers and a specific action mostly targeted on LVN, by nonserotoninergic pathways.


1985 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Kurata ◽  
J. Tanji

This report compares neuronal activity in the supplementary motor area (SMA) and the precentral motor cortex (PCM) in response to auditory and vibrotactile signals that required a monkey either to start a key-press movement or to refrain from initiating such a movement. Confirming previous reports (3, 9), a vibrotactile stimulus that triggered movement gave rise to two phases of neuronal activity in PCM neurons: a short-latency response time-locked to the occurrence of the vibrotactile stimulus, and a response related to the time of onset of the movement. When the animal was required to refrain from moving in response to the vibrotactile signal, the short-latency response was often attenuated and there was rarely any later activity. There was no attenuation of the short-latency response to the nontriggering vibrotactile stimulus in the anterior part of the postcentral somatosensory cortex. As reported previously (23), short-latency stimulus-locked responses of SMA neurons to a vibrotactile signals were less frequent and the magnitude of the responses was smaller than in the PCM. However, the properties of the later-occurring responses of SMA neurons were often different from those of PCM neurons. Many SMA neurons responded to both the triggering and nontriggering vibrotactile signals. Twenty-nine SMA neurons responded to the nontriggering signal only and not to the movement-triggering signal. Most of the PCM neurons were active after the auditory signal only when the signal was a trigger to start the key-press movement; three neurons exhibited a slight activity increase after the nontriggering auditory signal. In contrast, a number of SMA neurons responded to the nontriggering auditory signal as well as the movement-triggering auditory signal. Twenty-three neurons responded exclusively to the nontriggering auditory signal. These results indicate the extent to which SMA neuronal activity, in contrast to that of the PCM, is related to factors other than the execution of movement.


1968 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 995-1001
Author(s):  
Milton D. Suboski ◽  
Robert T. Greenner

In both within- and between- Ss designs, the ready signal was shown to increase the frequency of short-latency eyelid responses, most of which are below the latency usually regarded as defining a CR. Since the occurrence of a short latency response sharply reduces the probability of a longer latency response, fewer responses are scored as CRs when a ready signal is used. These factors appear to explain the decrement obtained with a ready signal in eyelid conditioning.


2009 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 1051-1058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Leukel ◽  
Jesper Lundbye-Jensen ◽  
Markus Gruber ◽  
Abraham T. Zuur ◽  
Albert Gollhofer ◽  
...  

During experiments involving ischemic nerve block, we noticed that the short-latency response (SLR) of evoked stretches in m. soleus decreased immediately following inflation of a pneumatic cuff surrounding the lower leg. The present study aimed to investigate this short-term effect of pressure application in more detail. Fifty-eight healthy subjects were divided into seven protocols. Unilateral stretches were applied to the calf muscles to elicit a SLR, and bilateral stretches to evoke a subsequent medium-latency response (MLR). Furthermore, H-reflexes and sensory nerve action potentials (SNAPs) were recorded. Additionally, stretches were applied with different velocities and amplitudes. Finally, the SLR was investigated during hopping and in two protocols that modified the ability of the muscle-tendon complex distal to the cuff to stretch. All measurements were performed with deflated and inflated cuff. Results of the protocols were as follows: 1) inflation of the cuff reduced the SLR but not the MLR; 2) the H-reflex, the M-wave, and, 3) SNAPs of n. tibialis remained unchanged with deflated and inflated cuff; 4) the SLR was dependent on the stretch velocity with deflated and also inflated cuff; 5 and 6) the reduction of the SLR by the cuff was dependent on the elastic properties of the muscle-tendon complex distal to the cuff; and 7) the cuff reduced the SLR during hopping. The present results suggest that the cuff did not affect the reflex arc per se. It is proposed that inflation restricted stretch of the muscles underlying the cuff so that most of the length change occurred in the muscle-tendon complex distal to the cuff. As a consequence, the muscle spindles lying within the muscle may be less excited, resulting in a reduced SLR. Due to its applicability in functional tasks, the introduced method can be a useful tool to study afferent feedback in motor control.


2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 511-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Budini ◽  
Markus Tilp

AbstractSpinal reflex excitability is traditionally assessed to investigate neural adjustments that occur during human movement. Different experimental procedures are known to condition spinal reflex excitability. Among these, lengthening movements and static stretching the human triceps have been investigated over the last 50 years. The purpose of this review is to shed light on several apparent incongruities in terms of magnitude and duration of the reported results. In the present review dissimilarities in neuro-spinal changes are examined in relation to the methodologies applied to condition and measure them. Literature that investigated three different conditioning procedures was reviewed: passive dorsiflexion, active dorsiflexion through antagonists shortening and eccentric plantar-flexors contractions. Measurements were obtained before, during and after lengthening or stretching. Stimulation intensities and time delays between conditioning procedures and stimuli varied considerably. H-reflex decreases immediately as static stretching is applied and in proportion to the stretch degree. During dorsiflexions the inhibition is stronger with greater dorsiflexion angular velocity and at lower nerve stimulation intensities, while it is weaker if any concomitant muscle contraction is performed. Within 2 s after a single passive dorsiflexion movement, H-reflex is strongly inhibited, and this effect disappears within 15 s. Dorsiflexions repeated over 1 h and prolonged static stretching training induce long-lasting inhibition. This review highlights that the apparent disagreement between studies is ascribable to small methodological differences. Lengthening movements and stretching can strongly influence spinal neural pathways. Results interpretation, however, needs careful consideration of the methodology applied.


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