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Frequency characteristics of heteronymous responses evoked by Achilles tendon vibration during quiet stance.

Authors :
Eschelmuller, Gregg
Mildren, Robyn L.
Blouin, Jean-Sébastien
Carpenter, Mark G.
Inglis, J. Timothy
Source :
Neuroscience Letters. Sep2020, Vol. 736, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Noisy tendon vibration was used as a novel method to assess heteronymous responses. • During quiet stance, responses were evident ipsilaterally in lower limb muscles. • Bilateral muscle responses were found in the back extensors. • These heteronymous muscle responses displayed distinct frequency bandwidths. Primary (Ia) sensory afferents that innervate muscle spindles provide strong synaptic input to homonymous motoneurons and are thought to play a role in balance control. In addition, Ia afferents have broad heteronymous connections; i.e., projections to motoneurons that innervate other muscles that act at the same joint as well as at different joints. The purpose of the current study was to investigate heteronymous Ia afferent connections from the triceps surae muscles to lower limb and back muscles during quiet standing in humans. We applied supra-threshold noisy vibration (10−115 Hz) to the right Achilles tendon of 12 participants maintaining quiet stance and recorded EMG activity bilaterally from homonymous (Soleus) and heteronymous muscles (Semitendinosus, Vastus Lateralis, Erector Spinae). We estimated coherence, phase, and gain between the tendon probe acceleration and rectified EMG from each muscle. We found significant coherence between the probe acceleration and EMG in ipsilateral Soleus (5−100 Hz), Semitendinosus (10−75 Hz), Vastus Lateralis (5-70 Hz), and bilateral Erector Spinae muscles (10−70 Hz). These results provide evidence that triceps surae muscle spindle afferents can influence the activity of muscles proximal to the ankle joint across a broad frequency band during quiet standing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043940
Volume :
736
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroscience Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145737871
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2020.135290