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Turning off the central contribution to contractions evoked by neuromuscular electrical stimulation
Authors:Dean J C  Yates L M  Collins D F
Affiliation:Human Neurophysiology Laboratory, Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, Centre for Neuroscience, E-435 Van Vliet Centre, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Abstract:
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation can generate contractions through both peripheral and central mechanisms. The peripheral mechanism involves the direct activation of motor axons, while the central mechanism involves the activation of sensory axons that recruit spinal neurons through a reflex pathway. For use in functional electrical stimulation. One must have control over turning the central mechanism on and off. We investigated whether inhibition developed through antagonist muscle (tibialis anterior, TA) contractions elicited by electrical stimulation or by volition can turn off the central mechanism in triceps surae. Both electrical stimulation and voluntary contractions of TA reduced or eliminated plantar flexion torque produced by the central mechanism, indicating that inhibition induced via these contractions can effectively turn off the central contribution to force. These findings suggest that patterns of electrical stimulation may be able to generate periodic muscle contractions by turning the central contribution to muscular contractions on and off.
Keywords:FES  persistent inward currents  post‐tetanic potentiation  reciprocal inhibition
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