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1.
This study investigates the responses to phasic shoulder retractions or protractions given at different times in the fictive locomotor cycle of the forelimbs of decerebrate cats. Generally, the responses in flexor and extensor muscles acting at the shoulder or elbow were bilaterally coordinated according to a negative feedback scheme. Perturbations in the direction of the movements that would have taken place if the animal had not been paralyzed tended to shorten the duration of the burst of activity of the muscles active during that phase and vice versa in the opposite phase. Changes in response patterns took place around critical points corresponding to the critical points B-D described in the companion paper using tonic perturbations of the limb. Past point C, at 58% of the ipsilateral extensor burst, protractions no longer prolonged the burst and no longer delayed onset of the contralateral extensor. At point B, occurring at 41% of the contralateral extensor burst, ipsilateral protractions maximally shortened the ipsilateral flexor phase, advancing ipsilateral extensor onset (point D) to point C of the contralateral extensor burst. During a critical period from the end of the ipsilateral flexor (point D) until the contralateral flexor onset, retractions elicited two alternative responses. Either the contralateral extensor activity was abolished and the contralateral flexor turned on, or it persisted for another cycle. We argue that the critical points found here correspond to critical biomechanical events in real locomotion and may underlie a phase-dependent motor coordination.  相似文献   

2.
To examine the function of descending brain stem pathways in the control of locomotion, we have characterized the discharge patterns of identified vestibulo- and reticulospinal neurons (VSNs and RSNs, respectively) recorded from the lateral vestibular nucleus (LVN) and the medullary reticular formation (MRF), during treadmill walking. Data during locomotion were obtained for 44 VSNs and for 63 RSNs. The discharge frequency of most VSNs (42/44) was phasically modulated in phase with the locomotor rhythm and the averaged peak discharge frequency ranged from 41 to 165 Hz (mean = 92.8 Hz). We identified three classes of VSNs based on their discharge pattern. Type A, or double peak, VSNs (20/44 neurons, 46%) showed two peaks and two troughs of activity in each step cycle. One of the peaks was time-locked to the activity of extensor muscles in the ipsilateral hindlimb while the other occurred anti-phase to this period of activity. Type B, or single pause, neurons (13/44 neurons, 30%) were characterized by a tonic or irregular discharge that was interrupted by a single pronounced and brief period of decreased activity that occurred just before the onset of swing in the ipsilateral hindlimb; some type B VSNs also exhibited a brief pulse of activity just preceding this decrease. Type C, or single peak, neurons (9/44 neurons, 23%) exhibited a single period of increased activity that, in most cells, was time-locked to the burst of activity of either extensor or flexor muscles of a single limb. The population of RSNs that we recorded included neurons that showed phasic activity related to the activity of flexor or extensor muscles [electromyographically (EMG) related, 26/63, 41%], those that were phasically active but whose activity was not time-locked to the activity of any of the recorded muscles (13/63, 21%) and those that were completely unrelated to locomotion (24/63, 38%). Most of the EMG-related RSNs showed one (15/26) or two (11/26) clear phasic bursts of activity that were temporally related to either flexor or extensor muscles. The discharge pattern of double-burst RSNs covaried with ipsilateral and contralateral flexor muscles. Peak averaged discharge activity in these EMG-related RSNs ranged from 4 to 98 Hz (mean = 35.2 Hz). We discuss the possibility that most VSNs regulate the overall activity of extensor muscles in the four limbs while RSNs provide a more specific signal that has the flexibility to modulate the activity of groups of flexor and extensor muscles, in either a single or in multiple limbs.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the ability of normal cats, trained to maintain a constant position while walking on a treadmill, to combine the paw-shake response with quadrupedal locomotion. Hindlimb paw-shake responses were elicited during walking after the right hindpaw was wrapped with tape. To assess intralimb and interlimb coordination of the combined behaviors, electromyographic (EMG) recordings from forelimb extensor muscles and from selected flexor and extensor muscles at the three major hindlimb joints were correlated with joint motion by using high-speed, cinefilm analysis. When paw shaking was combined with walking, the response occurred during the swing phase of the taped hindlimb. To accommodate the paw-shake response, swing duration of the shaking hindlimb and of the homolateral forelimb increased and was followed by a brief recovery step. Concurrently, to compensate for the response, stance durations of the contralateral forelimb and hindlimb increased. The magnitude of these adjustments in interlimb coordination was influenced by the number of paw-shake cycles, which ranged from one to four oscillations. Transitions between the muscle synergies for the paw-shake response and swing were smooth in the shaking limb. Early in the swing phase, when the flexor muscles were still active (F phase), the paw shake was initiated by an early onset of knee extensor activity, which preceded extensor activity at the hip and ankle. This action provided a transition from the general reciprocal synergy between flexor and extensor muscles of locomotion to the mixed synergy that is typical of the paw shake (30). Following the last paw-shake cycle, an extensor synergy initiated the E-1 phase of swing, and the resultant joint motion was in-phase extension of the hip, knee, and ankle to lower the paw for stance. Average cycle period and burst duration for muscles participating in the paw-shake response were similar to those reported for normal cats assuming a standing posture (28, 30). The average number of paw-shake cycles, however, decreased from eight to three when the response occurred during walking, suggesting that the response was truncated to provide for continued locomotion. Further, hip motion was variable when the paw shake was combined with swing, and sometimes the hip failed to oscillate and its trajectory was similar to that of an unperturbed swing phase. When hip joint oscillations occurred during the paw-shake response, they were in-phase with ankle motions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
1. This article presents the results from stimulation in 21 loci within the medullary reticular formation (MRF; between 0.5 and 2.5 mm from the midline) and in 5 loci in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) of four intact, unanesthetized cats during locomotion. Stimulus trains (11 pulses, 0.2-ms duration, 330 Hz, stimulus strength 35 microA) were applied at those loci in each track at which the most widespread effects in each of the four limbs were obtained with the cat at rest. Electromyograms were recorded from flexor and extensor muscles of each limb. 2. As previously reported, stimulation with the cat at rest generally evoked brief, short-latency, twitch responses in both flexor and extensor muscles of more than one limb. In contrast, stimulation during locomotion evoked a more complex pattern of activity in which responses were normally evoked in one or other of the muscle pairs and incorporated into the locomotor pattern. 3. In the majority of sites, the stimulation evoked excitatory responses in the flexor muscles of each of the four limbs during that period of the step cycle in which each respective muscle was naturally active; stimulation in the stance phase of locomotion, although less effective, was also capable of producing responses in these muscles. All three ipsilateral extensor muscles studied [long and lateral heads of triceps and vastus lateralis (Tri, TriL, and VL, respectively)] were normally inhibited during their phase of muscle activity, although excitatory responses were occasionally seen. Responses in the contralateral (co) Tri were invariably excitatory and were largest during the period of muscle activity, whereas responses during the period of activity of the coVL were mixed, with both excitatory and inhibitory responses being seen from any one locus. 4. Excitatory responses were normally largest when stimulation was applied during the time that the muscle was active during the locomotor cycle. Responses evoked at times when the muscle was inactive were sometimes larger than those evoked with the animal at rest; such responses were most commonly seen in the hindlimb flexors and in the coVL. 5. In both flexors and extensors of each of the four limbs, the latency of the responses was greatest when the cat was at rest and least for stimuli given during the period of activity of the respective muscle. Average latencies during the period of muscle activity ranged from a minimum of 9.0 +/- 2.6 (SD) ms for inhibitory responses in the ipsilateral Tri and TriL to a maximum of 17.1 +/- 3.0 ms for the responses evoked in the ipsilateral semitendinosus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Acute low spinal and curarized cats injected with noradrenergic agonists i.v. can elicit an efferent burst pattern which can be recorded in muscle nerve filaments and can be referred to as “fictive locomotion”. This study investigates the effect that feedback, arising from movements in the hip joint, can exert on the central network generating fictive locomotion. The central network is uncoupled from generating any active movements by curarization. The motor pattern could be entrained by applying sinusoidal hip movements, even when a very extensive denervation of the leg had been performed leaving only some of the muscles around the hip and the hip joint innervated. During flexion movements, efferents to different flexor muscles became active and during movements in the reverse direction (extension), efferents to extensors were active. With an increasing movement frequency the onsets of both flexor and extensor bursts were delayed in the movement cycle. The duration of the extensor bursts varied markedly with the movement cycle, whereas pure flexors changed less in burst duration. The frequency range within which the efferent burst activity was entrained in a strict 1:1 relation to the movement varied between 5 to 70% above and below the resting burst period. In preparations with a narrow 1:1 range, a “relative coordination” was encountered outside this range. The flexor burst duration was in these cases dependent on where in the hip movement cycle the bursts appeared.  相似文献   

6.
Acute low spinal and curarized cats injected with noradrenergic agonists i.v. can elicit an efferent burst pattern which can be recorded in muscle nerve filaments and can be referred to as "fictive locomotion". This study investigates the effect that feedback, arising from movements in the hip joint, can exert on the central network generating fictive locomotion. The central network is uncoupled from generating any active movements by curarization. The motor pattern could be entrained by applying sinusoidal hip movements, even when a very extensive denervation of the leg had been performed leaving only some of the muscles around the hip and the hip joint innervated. During flexion movements, efferents to different flexor muscles became active and during movements in the reverse direction (extension), efferents to extensors were active. With an increasing movement frequency the onsets of both flexor and extensor bursts were delayed in the movement cycle. The duration of the extensor bursts varied markedly with the movement cycle, whereas pure flexors changed less in burst duration. The frequency within which the efferent burst activity was entrained in a strict 1:1 relation to the movement varied between 5 to 70% above and below the resting burst period. In preparations with a narrow 1:1 range, a "relative coordination" was encountered outside this range. The flexor burst duration was in these cases dependent on where in the hip movement cycle the bursts appeared.  相似文献   

7.
Locomotor behavior is believed to be produced by interneuronal networks that are intrinsically organized to generate the underlying complex spatiotemporal patterns. In order to study the temporal correlation between the firing of individual interneurons and the pattern of locomotion, we utilized the spinal cord-forelimb preparation from the mudpuppy, in which electrophysiological recordings of neuronal activity were achieved during walking-like movement of the forelimb induced by bath application of N-methyl- D-aspartate (NMDA). Intra- and extracellular recordings were made in the C2 and C3 segments of the spinal cord. These segments contain independent flexor and extensor centers for the forelimb movement about the elbow joint during walking. Among the 289 cells recorded in the intermediate gray matter (an area between the ventral and dorsal horns) of the C2 and C3 segments, approximately 40% of the cells fired rhythmically during "walking." The firing rates were 6.4+/-0.4 impulses/s (mean +/- SE). These rhythmically active cells were classified into four types based on their phase of activity during a normalized step cycle. About half the rhythmic cells fired in phase with either the flexor (F) or extensor (E) motoneurons. The rest fired in the transitions between the two phases (F-->E and E-->F). Longitudinal distributions of the four types of interneurons along the spinal cord were in agreement with observations that revealed distinct but overlapping flexor and extensor centers for walking. Some cells triggered short-latency responses in the elbow flexor or extensor muscles and may be last-order interneurons. These observations suggest that there is a differential distribution of phase-specific interneurons in the central pattern generator of the mudpuppy spinal cord for walking.  相似文献   

8.
Group I afferents in nerves innervating the lateral gastrocnemius-soleus (LG-Sol), plantaris (P1), and vastus lateralis/intermedius (VL/VI) muscles were stimulated during walking in decerebrate cats. The stimulus trains were triggered at a fixed delay following the onset of bursts in the medial gastrocnemius muscle. Stimulation of all three nerves with long stimulus trains (>600 ms) prolonged the extensor bursts and delayed the onset of flexor burst activity. LG-Sol nerve stimulation had the strongest effect; often delaying the onset of flexor burst activity until the stimulus train was ended. By contrast, flexor bursts were usually initiated before the end of the stimulus train to the P1 and VL/VI nerves. The minimum stimulus strength required to increase the cycle period was between 1.3×threshold and 1.6×threshold for all three nerves. Simultaneous stimulation of the P1 and VL/VI nerves produced a larger effect on the cycle period than stimulation of either nerve alone. The spatial summation of inputs from knee and ankle muscles suggests that the excitatory action of the group I afferents during the stance phase is distributed to all leg extensor muscles. Stimulation of the group I afferents in extensor nerves generally produced an increase in the amplitude of the heteronymous extensor EMG towards the end of the stance phase. This increase in amplitude occurred even though there were only weak monosynaptic connections between the stimulated afferents and the motoneurones that innervated these heteronymous muscles. This suggests that the excitation was produced via oligosynaptic projections onto the extensor motoneuronal pool. Stimulation with 300 ms trains during the early part of flexion resulted in abrupt termination of the swing phase and reinitiation of the stance phase of the step cycle. The swing phase resumed coincidently with the stimulus offset. Usually, stimulation of two extensor nerves at group I strengths was required to elicit this effect. We were unable to establish the relative contributions of input from the group 1a and group 1b afferents to prolonging the stance phase. However, we consider it likely that group Ib afferents contribute significantly, since their activation has been shown to prolong extensor burst activity in reduced spinal preparations. Thus, our results add support to the hypothesis that unloading of the hindlimb during late stance is a necessary condition for the initiation of the swing phase in walking animals.  相似文献   

9.
The activity of selected single alpha-motoneurons, Renshaw cells (RCs), and Ia inhibitory interneurons (IaINs) during fictive locomotion was recorded via microelectrodes in decerebrate (precollicular-postmammillary) cats in which fictive locomotion was induced by stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. The interrelationships in the timing and frequency of discharge among these three interconnected cell types were determined by comparing their averaged step cycle firing histograms, which were normalized in reference to motoneuron activity recorded in ventral root filaments. Previous findings that RCs are rhythmically active during locomotion and discharge in phase with the motoneurons from which they are excited were confirmed, and further details of the phase relationships between RC and alpha-motoneuron activity during fictive locomotion were obtained. Flexor and extensor RCs became active after the onset of flexor and extensor motoneuron activity, respectively. Maximal activity in extensor RCs occurred at the end of the extension phase coincidental with the onset of hyperpolarization and a decrease in activity in extensor motoneurons. Maximal flexor RC activity occurred during middle to late flexion and was temporally related to the onset of reduced flexor motoneuron activity. The IaINs recorded in the present experiments were rhythmically active during fictive locomotion, as previously reported. The quadriceps IaINs were mainly active during the extension phase of the step cycle, along with extensor RCs. Thus the known inhibition of quadriceps IaINs by RCs coupled to quadriceps and other extensor motoneurons is obviously not sufficient to interfere with the appropriate phasing of IaIN activity and reciprocal inhibition during fictive locomotion, as had been speculated. Most of the quadriceps IaINs analyzed exhibited a decrease in discharge frequency at the end of the extension phase of the step cycle, which was coincidental with increased rates of firing in extensor RCs. These data are consistent with the possibility that extensor RCs contribute to the reduction in quadriceps IaIN discharge at the end of the extension phase of the step cycle. The possibility that IaIN rhythmicity during fictive locomotion arises from periodic inhibition, possibly from Renshaw cells, was tested by stimulating the reciprocal inhibitory pathway throughout the fictive step cycle. The amplitude of Ia inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) varied significantly throughout the fictive step cycle in 14 of the 17 motoneurons tested, and, in 11 of these 14 motoneurons, the Ia IPSPs were maximal during the phase of the step cycle in which the motoneuron was most  相似文献   

10.
1. To compare the basic hindlimb synergies for backward (BWD) and forward (FWD) walking, electromyograms (EMG) were recorded from selected flexor and extensor muscles of the hip, knee, and ankle joints from four cats trained to perform both forms of walking at a moderate walking speed (0.6 m/s). For each muscle, EMG measurements included burst duration, burst latencies referenced to the time of paw contact or paw off, and integrated burst amplitudes. To relate patterns of muscle activity to various phases of the step cycle, EMG records were synchronized with kinematic data obtained by digitizing high-speed ciné film. 2. Hindlimb EMG data indicate that BWD walking in the cat was characterized by reciprocal flexor and extensor synergies similar to those for FWD walking, with flexors active during swing and extensors active during stance. Although the underlying synergies were similar, temporal parameters (burst latencies and durations) and amplitude levels for specific muscles were different for BWD and FWD walking. 3. For both directions, iliopsoas (IP) and semitendinosus (ST) were active as the hip and knee joints flexed at the onset of swing. For BWD walking, IP activity decreased early, and ST activity continued as the hip extended and the knee flexed. For FWD walking, in contrast, ST activity ceased early, and IP activity continued as the hip flexed and the knee extended. For both directions, tibialis anterior (TA) was active throughout swing as the ankle flexed and then extended. A second ST burst occurred at the end of swing for FWD walking as hip flexion and knee extension slowed for paw contact. 4. For both directions, knee extensor (vastus lateralis, VL) activity began at paw contact. Ankle extensor (lateral gastrocnemius, LG) activity began during midswing for BWD walking but just before paw contact for FWD walking. At the ankle joint, flexion during the E2 phase (yield) of stance was minimal or absent for BWD walking, and ankle extension during BWD stance was accompanied by a ramp increase in LG-EMG activity. At the knee joint, the yield was also small (or absent) for BWD walking, and increased VL-EMG amplitudes were associated with the increased range of knee extension for BWD stance. 5. Although the uniarticular hip extensor (anterior biceps femoris, ABF) was active during stance for both directions, the hip flexed during BWD stance and extended during FWD stance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Coordination between motions of the head and the hindlimb paw ipsilateral to the stimulated pinna were assessed during the scratch cycle in freely moving cats. Motor patterns were determined by electromyographic (EMG) recordings made from epimysial-patch electrodes surgically implanted on the biventer cervicis (BC), complexus (CM), obliquus capitis inferior (OC), and splenius (SP) muscles and by fine-wire EMG electrodes implanted in two ankle muscles, medial gastrocnemius (MG), and tibialis anterior (TA). To assess head motions during the three phases of the scratch cycle (precontact, contact, postcontact), several responses were filmed, and in some cats an in vivo force transducer was implanted on an ankle extensor muscle (MG or plantaris, PL) to determine the tension profile during the scratch cycle. During the scratch cycle, the head's trajectory was usually characterized by a small oscillation in which the head was pushed away during paw contact (as hindlimb joints extended) and then repositioned during the noncontact phases (as hindlimb joints flexed). Neck muscle activity did not occur during all responses or during all cycles of a single multicycle scratch response, and when it occurred, neck muscle EMG was characterized as phasic (a single burst during the cycle) or tonic (low-level activity during the entire cycle). Neck muscles ipsilateral (i) to the scratching limb exhibited phasic bursts more than contralateral (c) muscles, and phasic activity was most frequently observed in the iBC, iSP, iOC, and cOC muscles. The cOC was reciprocally active with the ipsilateral muscles, and its burst coincided with the postcontact phase and the ankle flexor (TA) burst. The ipsilateral muscles (iOC, iSP, iBC) were active during paw contact, and the termination of all three bursts occurred synchronously just after peak tension of the ankle extensor was reached. The iBC was active before the onset of paw contact and may have been responsible for repositioning the head, along with the cOC, during the precontact phase. The iOC became active after the onset of paw contact (22 ms) and was recruited more often when the peak extensor tendon force was high (10–16 N). The iSP, in contrast, was active during the contact phase of most scratch cycles examined and its recruitment appeared to be unrelated to tendon forces. Our data suggest that phasic neck muscle activity is not obligatory during the cat scratch response, but is related to certain conditions such as a higher than average tendon force of an ankle extensor during contact and the need to reposition the head during the noncontact phases of the cycle. During contact it is possible that active muscle contraction helps to minimize head motion to provide a stable contact surface for the paw, thereby maximizing the possibility of the scratch stimulus being dislodged from the pinna. Possible neural mechanisms, both reflexes and central commands, responsible for coordinating motions of the head and hindlimb during the scratch cycle are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
A computational model of the mammalian spinal cord circuitry incorporating a two-level central pattern generator (CPG) with separate half-centre rhythm generator (RG) and pattern formation (PF) networks has been developed from observations obtained during fictive locomotion in decerebrate cats. Sensory afferents have been incorporated in the model to study the effects of afferent stimulation on locomotor phase switching and step cycle period and on the firing patterns of flexor and extensor motoneurones. Here we show that this CPG structure can be integrated with reflex circuits to reproduce the reorganization of group I reflex pathways occurring during locomotion. During the extensor phase of fictive locomotion, activation of extensor muscle group I afferents increases extensor motoneurone activity and prolongs the extensor phase. This extensor phase prolongation may occur with or without a resetting of the locomotor cycle, which (according to the model) depends on the degree to which sensory input affects the RG and PF circuits, respectively. The same stimulation delivered during flexion produces a temporary resetting to extension without changing the timing of following locomotor cycles. The model reproduces this behaviour by suggesting that this sensory input influences the PF network without affecting the RG. The model also suggests that the different effects of flexor muscle nerve afferent stimulation observed experimentally (phase prolongation versus resetting) result from opposing influences of flexor group I and II afferents on the PF and RG circuits controlling the activity of flexor and extensor motoneurones. The results of modelling provide insights into proprioceptive control of locomotion.  相似文献   

13.
1. This study examines rhythmical activity of primary afferents occurring during "fictive" locomotion in decorticate paralyzed cats. Oscillations of the dorsal root potential (DRP) at the frequency of the locomotor rhythm have been observed at the lumbosacral and cervical levels. In addition, rhythmic antidromic discharges of primary afferent units have been recorded from the proximal stumps of cut dorsal root filaments. A detailed study of the relationships between the DRP fluctuations, the antidromic discharges, and the locomotor activity monitored by recording extensor and flexor muscle nerves is presented. 2. Typical DRP recordings from both lumbosacral and cervical levels show two negative waves (N1 and N2) separated by positive troughs (P1 and P2) in each locomotor cycle. Linear regression analyses indicate that the first negative wave (which generally has the largest amplitude) is related to the flexor activity whereas the second is related to the extensor activity. The relative amplitude of the two negative waves may vary without apparent concomitant changes in the recorded flexor or extensor motor nerves. The positive troughs occur respectively close to the period of transition between flexor and extensor activities and between extensor and flexor activities. 3. DRPs of similar period and amplitude can be observed in different ipsilateral roots recorded simultaneously. The DRPs recorded bilaterally from the same segment have the same periodicity but are out-of-phase. Point-to-point variations of amplitude in bilaterally recorded roots are not correlated. This suggests that the polarization of primary afferents on one side is mainly related to the locomotor events on that side. DRPs have been recorded in cats spinalized at Th13 and injected with nialamide and l-DOPA. This suggests that although the supraspinal contribution may be important, at least part of the DRPs may result from locomotor activity within the spinal cord itself. 4. A salient finding in our experiments was that of rhythmic antidromic unit discharges in the proximal stump of cut dorsal root filaments. Of the 194 units recorded, 19% (37/194) discharged in distinct bursts occurring at fixed times in the locomotor cycle. The majority of the units discharged either one burst during the period of flexor or extensor activity or one burst during one of the two periods of transition. Three units discharged two bursts per locomotor cycle. The frequency of the antidromic discharges of some units in one limb were also found to be modulated by stimulation of the skin or passive manipulation of the limbs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The simultaneous control of the hindlimb paw-shake response and hindlimb walking at slow treadmill speeds (0.2-0.4 m/s) was examined in adult cats spinalized at the T12 level, 3-6 mo earlier. Paw shaking was elicited by either 1) application of adhesive tape or 2) water to the right hindpaw. To assess intralimb and interlimb coordination of the combined behaviors, activity from selected flexor and extensor muscles at the hip, knee, and ankle was recorded, and the kinematics of these joints were determined from high-speed cinefilm. When paw shaking was combined with hindlimb walking, the response in the stimulated limb was initiated during swing (F phase) of the step cycle. The onset of knee extensor activity provided the transition from the flexor synergy of swing to the mixed synergy of paw shake. At the end of the paw shake, an extensor synergy initiated the E-1 phase of swing, and the resultant joint motion was in-phase extension at the hip, knee, and ankle to lower the paw for contact with the treadmill belt. During the rapid (81 ms) paw-shake cycles, knee extensor and ankle flexor muscles exhibited single, coactive bursts that were reciprocal with coactive hip and ankle extensor bursts. This mixed synergy was reflected in the limb coordination, as knee flexion coincided with ankle extension and knee flexion coincided with ankle extension. Phasing of hip motions was variable, reflecting the role of the proximal in stabilization during paw shake (16). Although the number of paw-shake cycles combined during swing varied greatly from 2 to 14, average cycle periods, burst durations, and intralimb synergies were similar to those previously reported for spinal cats tested under conditions in which the trunk was suspended and hindlimbs were pendent (23, 27). For step cycles during which a long paw-shake response of 8-14 cycles occurred, swing duration of the shaking limb increased by 1 s, and during this prolonged interval, the contralateral hindlimb completed two support steps. Stance duration of the support steps was also prolonged. This adjustment maximized the duration of paw-contact and minimized any period of nonsupport by the contralateral hindlimb during paw shake. Completion of the paw-shake response was followed by either an alternating, or a nonalternating, gait pattern on the recovery steps. One spinal cat combined locomotion with short two-cycle paw-shake responses, and because the shortened response was limited primarily to the time ordinarily devoted to swing, interlimb adjustments were slight.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The sciatic nerve was crushed in the right hindlimb in newborn (3-8 h old) rats. Two to four months later, electromyographic activity was recorded from both the control and reinnervated ankle extensor muscles soleus or lateral gastrocnemius and from the ankle flexor muscle tibialis anterior. Tonic postural activity was present in the extensor muscles on both sides during quiet stance. The control flexor muscles were usually silent in this situation, but the reinnervated flexors exhibited abnormal sustained activity. During locomotion, the control extensors were activated during the stance phase and their mean burst made up 61.5% of the step cycle. The control tibialis anterior muscle fired only during the swing phase, with the burst lasting 18.1% of the step cycle. In the reinnervated extensor muscles, the mean burst duration was decreased (46% of the cycle) but the basic locomotor pattern was not impaired. The reinnervated tibialis muscle, however, was activated abnormally, with one appropriate flexor burst during the swing phase and an "extensor-like" burst during the stance phase of the step. Reflex responses to stretch were weak or absent on the operated side. Histological examination showed that the reinnervated soleus and tibialis muscles were almost devoid of muscle spindles. The motor unit mean firing rates in the reinnervated soleus (22 imp/s) and lateral gastrocnemius (45 imp/s) matched those of the control muscles (25 and 42 imp/s, respectively). In contrast to the phasic, high-frequency firing (52-80 imp/s) in the control tibialis, the reinnervated tibialis motor units fired at significantly lower rates (22-56 imp/s).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Summary This study has described the organization of EMG activities among the muscles of a standing subject's legs during rapid postural adjustments (95–120 ms latencies). Adjustments were elicited by the horizontal translation of both feet (causing antero-posterior sway), by the synchronous vertical displacement of both feet (causing changes in height) and by the reciprocal vertical displacement of the feet (causing a locomotor-like motion of the legs and lateral sway of the body). The resulting patterns of EMG activity were highly specific for each kind of displacement, and all subjects completely reorganized the pattern of activity from one form to another within the first trials, even immediately following unexpected stimulus changes.The organization of EMG activities during reciprocal vertical displacements was qualitatively quite similar to those observed during the comparable swing and stance phases of the locomotor step cycle; flexor muscles of the ankle and knee (those being shortened by the displacement) contracted in the upwardly displaced leg while extensor muscles were active in the downwardly displaced leg. This pattern was in marked contrast to the activation of lengthening muscles during synchronous vertical and antero-posterior sway displacements. Finally, electrical cutaneous stimulation of the dorsum of one foot during reciprocal vertical displacements always enhanced the EMG activity of the agonist leg muscles, in-phase with the vertical movement.  相似文献   

17.
1. Tactile stimuli to the paw consisting of a stick making contact or an air puff aimed at the dorsum were used to study the phasic influence of locomotor activity on the reflex pattern elicited in extensor and flexor muscles and on the induced compensatory movements in intact cats. The resulting movements and reflex pattern are called "stumbling corrective reactions." 2. The basic reflex pattern and movements of the stumbling corrective reaction are: a) if the stimulus occurs during the swing phase, a short-latency activation of the flexor muscles, which induces an additional flexion of the limb lifting the paw over the obstacle; b) if the stimulus occurs during the support phase, an inhibition followed by an excitation of the extensor muscles, which neither increase nor decrease the extension. However, the stimulus evokes an increased flexor activity in the succeeding swing phase, which induces a brisker flexion. 3. Tactile stimuli to the proximal part of the limb or to the belly in front of the knee evoked the same type of phase-dependent compensatory reactions. Such reactions would presumably be beneficial for the animal to avoid high obstacles that impede movement. 4. A nonnoxious electrical stimulus (typically 2 mA; 1 ms) applied to the dorsum of the paw was used to study systematically the reflex pattern of the stumbling corrective reaction. Two pathways were defined to the knee flexor (semitendinosus). One early burst was evoked at about 10 ms and one later at about 25 ms after the stimulus. Short inhibitory pathways and longer excitatory pathways (20-50 ms) projected to the extensor nuclei. A short-latency (10 ms) excitatory pathway to the ankle extensor (lateral gastrocnemius) was also activated. 5. A painful electrical stimulus applied to the dorsum of the paw evoked large flexor responses during the whole step cycle. During the support phase the locomotion was disrupted as the supporting limb was withdrawn. 6. The results demonstrate that intact cats are able to compensate rapidly for unpredicted perturbations and that the reflex pattern and the induced corrective movements are adapted to the locomotor activity so that functionally meaningful movements are evoked in each phase of the step cycle. 7. The evoked reflexes and their modulation are consistent with those previously found in chronic spinal cats during walking and in paralyzed spinal cats performing "fictive locomotion." It is suggested that the same spinal pathways are used, and that they are controlled by the spinal "locomotor generator."  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the specificity of fusimotor (gamma) drive during locomotion, gamma-efferents were recorded from the flexor digitorum longus (FDL) and flexor hallucis longus (FHL) nerves in a decerebrate cat preparation. These nerves innervate hindlimb muscles that differ in some aspects of their mechanical action. For both FHL and FDL two stereotyped patterns of gamma activity were distinguished. Tonic units fired throughout the step cycle and had less modulation, but higher minimum rates, than phasic units, which were mainly recruited with ankle extensor [soleus (SOL)] electromyogram (EMG) activity. Differences in the relative timing of these patterns were apparent. In FHL the activity of phasic and most tonic neurons peaked after EMG onset. With FDL, tonic units generally reached maximum rate before, while phasic units peaked after, the beginning of EMG activity. During locomotion FHL and FDL alpha activity were rhythmically recruited with SOL. However, consistent with previous reports, FHL and FDL differed in their patterns of alpha activity. FHL was stereotyped while FDL was variable. Both FHL and FDL had activity related to ankle extensor EMG, but only FDL exhibited a peak around the end of this phase. No corresponding gamma activity was observed in FDL. In conclusion, 1) FHL and FDL received tonic and phasic fusimotor drive; 2) there was no alpha/gamma linkage for the late FDL alpha burst; 3) phasic gamma-efferents in both muscles received similar inputs, linked to plantar flexor alpha activity; and 4) tonic gamma-efferents differed, to the extent that they were modulated at all. The FHL units peaked with the plantar flexor alphas. The FDL neurons generally peaked before alpha activity even began.  相似文献   

19.
In order to determine the maximum joint stiffness that could be produced by cocontraction of wrist flexor and extensor muscles, experiments were conducted in which healthy human subjects stabilized a wrist manipulandum that was made mechanically unstable by using positive position feedback to create a load with the characteristics of a negative spring. To determine a subject's limit of stability, the negative stiffness of the manipulandum was increased by increments until the subject could no longer reliably stabilize the manipulandum in a 1° target window. Static wrist stiffness was measured by applying a 3° rampand-hold displacement of the manipulandum, which stretched the wrist flexor muscles. As the load stiffness was made more and more negative, subjects responded by increasing the level of cocontraction of flexor and extensor muscles to increase the stiffness of the wrist. The stiffness measured at a subject's limit of stability was taken as the maximum stiffness that the subject could achieve by cocontraction of wrist flexor and extensor muscles. In almost all cases, this value was as large or larger than that measured when the subject was asked to cocontract maximally to stiffen the wrist in the absence of any load. Static wrist stiffness was also measured when subjects reciprocally activated flexor or extensor muscles to hold the manipulandum in the target window against a load generated by a stretched spring. We found a strong linear correlation between wrist stiffness and flexor torque over the range of torques used in this study (20–80% maximal voluntary contraction). The maximum stiffness achieved by cocontraction of wrist flexor and extensor muscles was less than 50% of the maximum value predicted from the joint stiffness measured during matched reciprocal activation of flexor and extensor muscles. EMG recorded from either wrist flexor or extensor muscles during maximal cocontraction confirmed that this reduced stiffness was due to lower levels of activation during cocontraction of flexor and extensor muscles than during reciprocal contraction.  相似文献   

20.
 The fine control of locomotion results from a complex interaction between descending signals from supraspinal structures and sensory feedback from the limbs. In this report, we studied the interaction between vestibulospinal volleys descending from Deiters’ nucleus and group I afferent input from extensor muscles. It has been shown that both pathways can exert powerful control over the amplitude and the timing of muscle bursting activity in the different phases of the step cycle. The effects of stimulating these pathways on the fictive locomotor rhythm were compared in decerebrate, partially spinal cats (ipsilateral ventral quadrant intact) injected with nialamide and l-dopa. As reported before, stimulation of both Deiters’ nucleus and group I fibres from ankle extensor muscles, when given during the flexor phase, stopped the flexor activity and initiated activity in extensors. When applied during the extensor phase, the same stimulation prolonged the extensor activity and therefore delayed the onset of flexor activity. This similarity suggests that the two pathways might converge on common spinal interneurones. This possibility was tested with the spatial facilitation technique in lumbosacral motoneurones. Deiters’ nucleus and group I fibres from extensor muscles were stimulated with different intensities and with several different coupling intervals. Motoneurones showing clear di- and/or polysynaptic excitation from both pathways were retained for analysis. Surprisingly, in all cases, there were no signs of spatial facilitation, but a simple algebraic sum of the two excitatory postsynaptic potentials. This result indicates that each input acts on the rhythm generator through separate interneuronal pathways. Received: 20 August 1996 / Accepted: 14 November 1996  相似文献   

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