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Differences in excitability properties of FDI and ADM motor axons
Authors:Jong Seok Bae MD  Setsu Sawai MD  Sonoko Misawa MD  Kazuaki Kanai MD  Sagiri Isose MD  Satoshi Kuwabara MD
Institution:1. Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba University, 1‐8‐1 Inohana, Chuo‐ku, Chiba 260‐8670, Japan;2. Department of Neurology, Busan Paik Hospital, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, South Korea
Abstract:The first dorsal interosseous (FDI) and abductor digiti minimi (ADM) muscles are innervated by the same ulnar nerve, but studies have shown that the former is much more severely affected in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. In this study, threshold tracking was used to investigate whether membrane properties differ between FDI and ADM motor axons. In 12 normal subjects, compound muscle action potentials were recorded from FDI and ADM after ulnar nerve stimulation at the wrist. The strength–duration time constant was significantly longer in the FDI axons than in the ADM axons, and latent addition studies showed greater threshold changes at the conditioning–test stimulus of 0.2 ms in FDI than in ADM axons. These findings suggest that nodal persistent sodium conductances are more prominent in FDI axons than in ADM axons, and therefore excitability is physiologically higher in FDI axons. Even in the same nerve at the same sites, membrane properties of FDI and ADM motor axons differ significantly, and thus their axonal/neuronal responses to disease may also differ. Muscle Nerve 39: 350–354, 2009
Keywords:amyotrophic lateral sclerosis  latent addition  nerve excitability  sodium channel  strength–  duration time constant
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