Sensorimotor integration at spinal level as a basis for muscle coordination during voluntary movement in humans
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 96 (5) , 1961-1967
- https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01073.2003
Abstract
Spinal reflexes have traditionally been treated as separate from voluntary movements. However, animal experiments since the 1950s and human experiments since the 1970s have documented that sensory activities in afferents from muscles, skin, and joints are integrated with descending motor commands at the level of common spinal interneurons. Two different roles of this sensorimotor integration at the spinal level may be discerned. First, sensory feedback evoked by the active muscles may help to drive the motoneurons. Second, external stimuli, such as sudden perturbations of a limb, may give rise to “error signals,” which are integrated into the ongoing motor activity and form the basis of corrective responses. When interpreting experimental data, it is important to consider these two different roles. Application of external stimuli may provide little information about how the spinal cord integrates sensory feedback evoked as part of ongoing movements. The complexity of the spinal machinery that is activated by external stimuli also makes the interpretation of data obtained from experiments dealing with artificial external stimuli, such as electrical stimuli, difficult. Nevertheless, such experiments have provided and will continue to provide very valuable information about how the brain and spinal cord ensure coordination of muscle activity during voluntary movement. So far, spinal control mechanisms have only been investigated to a limited extent in relation to sports and occupational activities. Provided that researchers consider the methodological problems of the techniques and that they seek independent validation of the findings, this may be a very fruitful research field in the future.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in Reciprocal Inhibition Across the Ankle Joint With Changes in External Load and Pedaling Rate During BicyclingJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- Suppression of the H reflex in humans by disynaptic autogenetic inhibitory pathways activated by the test volleyThe Journal of Physiology, 2002
- Suppression of EMG activity by transcranial magnetic stimulation in human subjects during walkingThe Journal of Physiology, 2001
- Major role for sensory feedback in soleus EMG activity in the stance phase of walking in manThe Journal of Physiology, 2000
- Modulation of reciprocal inhibition between ankle extensors and flexors during walking in manThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Cortical control of spinal pathways mediating group II excitation to human thigh motoneuronesThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Differential projection of the sural nerve to early and late recruited human tibialis anterior motor units: change of recruitment gainActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1993
- Interneuronal relay in spinal pathways from proprioceptorsProgress in Neurobiology, 1992
- Synaptic effects on recruitment gain: a mechanism of importance for the input-output relations of motoneurone pools?Brain Research, 1990
- Discharge Patterns in Human Muscle Spindle Afferents during Isometric Voluntary ContractionsActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1970