4.6 Article

The Strategy of the Brain to Maintain the Force Production in Painful Contractions-A Motor Units Pool Reorganization

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11203299

Keywords

experimental pain; hypertonic saline; motor unit; muscle; pain models

Categories

Funding

  1. FCT (Portuguese national funding agency for science, research and technology) [2022.09534]
  2. BD

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A common symptom in neuromuscular diseases is pain, which affects human movement. This study investigates how the brain recruits different motor units to produce torque during induced muscle pain. The results show that the strategy for maintaining force production during pain is to recruit motor units with higher recruitment threshold and action potential amplitude.
A common symptom in neuromuscular diseases is pain, which changes human movement in many ways. Using the decomposed electromyographic signal, we investigate the strategy of the brain in recruiting different pools of motor units (MUs) to produce torque during induced muscle pain in terms of firing rate (FR), recruitment threshold (RT) and action potential amplitude (MUAP(AMP)). These properties were used to define two groups (G1/G2) based on a K-means clusterization method. A 2.0 mL intramuscular hypertonic (6%) or isotonic (0.9%) saline solution was injected to induce pain or act as a placebo during isometric and isokinetic knee extension contractions. While isometric torque decreases after pain induction with hypertonic solution, this does not occur in isokinetic torque. This occurs because the MUs re-organized after the injection of both solutions. This is supported by an increase in RT, in both G1 and G2 MUs. However, when inducing pain with the hypertonic solution, RT increase is exacerbated. In this condition, FR also decreases, while MUAP(AMP) increases only for G1 MUs. Therefore, this study proposes that the strategy for maintaining force production during pain is to recruit MUs with higher RT and MUAP(AMP).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available