Response of soleus Ia afferents to vibration in the presence of the tonic vibration reflex in the decerebrate cat
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 311 (1) , 97-112
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1981.sp013575
Abstract
1. Micro‐electrode recordings were made from single Ia afferents in the intact nerve to the soleus muscle in the decerebrate cat while the muscle was developing a tonic vibration reflex. This was done in order to test how effectively the afferents were excited by the vibration, and to see if any insecurity in driving might be related to tremor.2. When the amplitude of vibration was 50 μm, and the tonic vibration reflex was reasonably well developed (> 1 N of active tension) all but one of forty‐four Ia afferents were driven 1:1 by the vibration. Most were still driven by 30 μm vibration. The vibration, consisting of a train of discrete pulses at 150 Hz, was applied longitudinally in combination with a stretch of 1 mm to make the muscle taut.3. If the reflex was poorly developed (active tension < 1 N) the driving was on average less secure. However, fourteen of eighteen afferents then studied were still driven 1:1 by 50 μm vibration. The lower level of excitation by vibration was thought to be due to a deficiency of spontaneous fusimotor activity, because stroking the cat's tail or other similar gentle manipulation led each of the three misbehaving afferents so tested to be driven securely by 50 μm vibration; at the same time the reflex tension increased.4. Additional, indirect evidence favouring widespread security of Ia driving by 50 μm vibration in the presence of the reflex was obtained by modulating the amplitude of the 150 Hz vibration with a 7‐10 Hz square wave and detecting any tension fluctuations at that frequency by spectral analysis. Small degrees of modulation (e.g. < 10%) produced little if any effect, although larger depths of modulation had a powerful action.5. When the amplitude of vibration was reduced to permit insecure driving but still to elicit a reflex response, the fluctuations in Ia firing pattern were unlike those previously seen in the de‐efferented muscle. Spectral analysis showed that these firing fluctuations bore a general similarity to the tremor in the same preparation, but measurement of coherence demonstrated that the tremor and Ia firing were not well related. This was probably because individual Ia afferents were primarily influenced by local factors, and provides further evidence against the tremor of this preparation being attributable to the action of the stretch reflex.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
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