Dynamics and directional sensitivity of neck muscle spindle responses to head rotation
- 1 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 57 (6) , 1716-1729
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1987.57.6.1716
Abstract
With the use of floating electrodes we recorded from the C2 dorsal root ganglion of decerebrate cats during sinusoidal and trapezoidal head rotation. Fifty-one spontaneously firing afferents were identified as muscle spindle endings. Some were identified by their excitatory response to injection of succinylcholine, others by the similarity of their behavior to that of endings excited by the drug. Because afferent input to the ganglion was restricted by sectioning most nerve trunks, most spindle endings were presumably located in ventral and ventrolateral perivertebral muscles. The firing of each spindle afferent was modulated most effectively by tilting the head in a specific direction; this direction was termed its response vector. Responses to sine waves and trapezoids were then studied with stimuli oriented as closely as possible to the vertical plane of this vector. Most spindle afferents could be classified in one of two categories. Those with high gain, pronounced nonlinearity, and high dynamic index were called type A. Those classified as type B had low gain, a fairly linear response, and low dynamic index. In response to small (0.5 degrees) stimuli, type A endings had phase leads of approximately 40 degrees at frequencies of sinusoidal stimulation of 0.02-0.1 Hz, increasing to approximately 80 degrees at 4 Hz; with larger (2.5 degrees) stimuli, phase was advanced by an additional 10-20 degrees at all frequencies. Phase of type B responses was less advanced than that of type A responses. Gain slopes of the two types of endings were similar. Bode plots of spindle afferents strongly resembled those of upper cervical neurons whose activity is modulated by head rotation. Each spindle afferent had a response vector whose direction remained stable with time, different frequencies of stimulation, and different stimulus amplitudes. The distribution of response vectors covered approximately 270 degrees, with a gap near nose down pitch. Changing initial head position usually had little effect on the direction of an afferent's response vector or on response dynamics. However, stimulation far from the best plane could transform a type A into a type B response. This raises the possibility that type B receptors could be type A receptors best stimulated by yaw and with only low sensitivity to stimulation in vertical planes. Type A receptors have all the properties of spindle primaries. The identification of type B receptors remains uncertain, because they may include secondary afferents as well as primaries stimulated far from their best three-dimensional vector.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pattern of segmental monosynaptic input to cat dorsal neck motoneurons.Journal of Neurophysiology, 1981
- Physiological properties of muscle spindles in dorsal neck muscles of the catJournal of Neurophysiology, 1979
- Activity patterns in individual hindlimb primary and secondary muscle spindle afferents during normal movements in unrestrained catsJournal of Neurophysiology, 1979
- Frequency-response analysis of vestibular-induced neck reflex in cat. II. Functional significance of cervical afferents and polysynaptic descending pathwaysJournal of Neurophysiology, 1978
- Small-signal analysis of response of mammalian muscle spindles with fusimotor stimulation and a comparison with large-signal responsesJournal of Neurophysiology, 1978
- Long-Term Unit Recording from Somatosensory Neurons in the Spinal Ganglia of the Freely Walking CatScience, 1977
- Effects of fusimotor stimulation on the response of the secondary ending of the muscle spindle to sinusoidal stretching (cat)The Journal of Physiology, 1977
- Static and dynamic fusimotor action on the response of IA fibres to low frequency sinusoidal stretching of widely ranging amplitudeThe Journal of Physiology, 1977
- Discharges of single hindlimb afferents in the freely moving catJournal of Neurophysiology, 1976
- LOCATION OF RECEPTORS FOR TONIC NECK REFLEXESJournal of Neurophysiology, 1951