Spinal reciprocal inhibition in human locomotion

被引:42
作者
Kido, A
Tanaka, N
Stein, RB [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alberta, Ctr Neurosci, Heritage Med Res Ctr 513, Edmonton, AB T6G 2S2, Canada
[2] Keio Univ, Sch Med, Dept Rehabil Med, Tokyo 1608582, Japan
[3] Univ Alberta, Dept Physiol, Edmonton, AB T6G 2S2, Canada
关键词
antagonist muscle nerve stimulation; walking; running;
D O I
10.1152/japplphysiol.01060.2003
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
The purpose of this paper was to study spinal inhibition during several different motor tasks in healthy human subjects. The short-latency, reciprocal inhibitory pathways from the common peroneal (CP) nerve to the soleus muscle and from the tibial nerve to the tibialis anterior muscle were studied as a depression of ongoing voluntary electromyograph (EMG) activity. First, the effect of stimulus intensity on the amount of inhibition was examined to decide an appropriate stimulation to study the task-dependent modulation of inhibition. Then, the inhibition at one level of stimulation (1.5 x motor threshold) was investigated during standing, walking, and running. The change in slope of inhibition vs. EMG level, which approximates the fraction of ongoing activity that is inhibited, decreased with CP stimulation from 0.52 during standing to 0.30 during fast walking (6 km/h) to 0.17 during running at 9 km/h. Similarly, the slope decreased with tibial nerve stimulation from 0.68 (standing) to 0.42 (fast walking) to 0.35 (running at 9 km/h). All differences, except the last one, were highly significant (P<0.01, Student's t-test). However, the difference between walking (0.42) and running (0.36)at the same speed (6 km/h) was not significant with tibial nerve stimulation and only significant at P<0.05 with CP nerve stimulation (0.30, 0.20). Also, the difference between standing (0.52) and slow walking (3 km/h; 0.41) with CP stimulation was not significant, but it was significant (P<0.01) with tibial nerve stimulation (0.68, 0.49). In conclusion, our findings indicate that spinal reciprocal inhibition decreases substantially with increasing speed and only changes to a lesser extent with task.
引用
收藏
页码:1969 / 1977
页数:9
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