4.6 Article

Sustained contractions produced by plateau-like behaviour in human motoneurones

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 538, Issue 1, Pages 289-301

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2001.012825

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Electrical stimulation over human muscle can generate force directly by activation of motor axons and indirectly by 'reflex' recruitment of spinal motoneurones. These experiments were designed to define the properties of the centrally generated 'reflex' force, including the optimal stimulus conditions for producing it in tibialis anterior (TA) and triceps surae (TS), and its interaction with volition. Subjects (n = 21) were seated with their foot strapped to an isometric myograph. Surface EMG was recorded from TS and TA. High-frequency electrical stimulation (100 Hz) of TS and TA with wide pulse widths (1 ms) was most effective to evoke the sustained centrally generated forces. The maximal force evoked by this mechanism during stimulation of TA for 40 s was similar to42% of that produced by a maximal voluntary contraction. For both muscle groups, ramp increases and decreases in stimulus frequency (from similar to4 to 100 Hz and back to 4 Hz over 6 s) resulted in marked hysteresis in the force-frequency plot. After a single 'burst' of 100 Hz stimulation during prolonged stimulation at 25 Hz, force remained elevated. Repeated bursts often generated progressively larger force increments. These behaviours were abolished by an anaesthetic nerve block proximal to the stimulation site, confirming the central origin for the 'extra' force. After a brief voluntary contraction was performed during 25 Hz stimulation, force remained elevated, and this showed some gradation with voluntary contraction amplitude. Sometimes voluntary contractions alone initiated the sustained central motor output. Involuntary contractions often persisted for many seconds after electrical stimulation ceased. These were not terminated by brief inhibitory inputs to the active motoneurones but could be stopped by the voluntary command to 'relax completely'. Overall, these centrally generated contractions are consistent with activation of plateau potentials in motoneurones innervating the ankle dorsiflexors and plantarflexors. Large forces can be produced through this mechanism. The interaction with volitional drives suggests that plateau behaviour may contribute significantly to the normal output of human motoneurones.

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