Recruitment order of human spindle endings in isometric voluntary contractions
- 1 December 1978
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 285 (1) , 101-112
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1978.sp012560
Abstract
1. The responses of twenty-two spindle endings in the anterior tibial and toe extensor muscles of human subjects were studied during isometric voluntary contractions of the receptor-bearing muscle with the ankle joint fixed in 25 degrees plantar flexion.2. The discharge of eighteen endings accelerated in voluntary contractions when the contraction strength exceeded a threshold level which differed for different endings but was reproducible for the same ending.3. With contractions of slow onset the latency to spindle acceleration varied with the speed of onset of the contraction. Endings with a background discharge were often unloaded by contractions until the contraction strength exceeded the threshold for activation of the ending.4. No correlation was found between the sensitivity of a spindle to external length changes and its ease of activation in a voluntary contraction. For two spindle endings with a background discharge there was no change in either discharge frequency or the regularity of spindle discharge during contractions which were below the threshold for activation of the endings. It is concluded that the threshold for activation of a spindle ending in an isometric voluntary contraction is determined by its fusimotor innervation, and that fusimotor neurones probably have a recruitment order, much as do skeletomotor neurones.5. Once activated, the discharge of spindle endings fluctuated with changes in skeletomotor activity but the relationship for some endings contained non-linearities. Such non-linearities were not as apparent in multi-unit recordings from a number of spindle endings in the contracting muscle. It is concluded that the fusimotor drive to a muscle is proportional to the skeletomotor drive to the muscle, and that skeletomotor and fusimotor neurones are subjected to similar if not identical descending command signals. From the work of Evarts (1968), it seems likely that these command signals are related more to desired muscle force than to desired muscle length.Keywords
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