Reciprocal inhibition following lesions of the spinal cord in man.
- 1 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 414 (1) , 145-157
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1989.sp017681
Abstract
1. Reciprocal inhibition was studied in normal subjects and patients with spinal cord lesions by stimulating the posterior tibial nerve below the threshold of the soleus .alpha.-motoneurone axons and recording the changes in firing probability of single tibialis anterior motor units activated by voluntary contraction. A short-latency (about 35 ms) period of decreased firing probability was assumed to represent reciprocal inhibition. 2. For a given stimulus intensity this inhibition was greater in patients with spinal lesions than in normal subjects. 3. The stimulus intensities at which soleus motoneurones and the Ia inhibitory interneurones were brought to threshold provided an estimate of the relative excitability of these two neural populations. In the patients with spinal lesions the Ia inhibitory interneurones were more excitable than soleus motoneurones, whereas in normal subjects the excitabilities were approximately equal. 4. Stimulation of the posterior tibial nerve below the threshold of .alpha.-motoneurone axons also resulted in a second period of inhibition with a latency of approximately 50 ms. This was less prominant in the patients with spinal cord lesions. 5. It is concluded that transmission through the pathways mediating reciprocal inhibition of flexor muscles during their voluntary contraction is enhanced following a spinal cord lesion in man but that a later inhibitory process is depressed.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coexistent Hoffmann reflexes in human leg muscles are commonly due to volume conductionExperimental Neurology, 1988
- Central motor conduction times using transcranial stimulation and F Wave latenciesMuscle & Nerve, 1988
- MOVEMENT DEFICITS CAUSED BY HYPEREXCITABLE STRETCH REFLEXES IN SPASTIC HUMANSBrain, 1986
- Afferent projections to human tibialis anterior motor units active at various levels of muscle contractionActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1986
- Changes in segmental reflexes following chronic spinal cord hemisection in the cat:Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1983
- Relationship between EPSP shape and cross-correlation profile explored by computer simulation for studies on human motoneuronsExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- Reciprocal excitation of muscle antagonists by the primary afferent pathwayExperimental Brain Research, 1982
- Cutaneous and muscle afferent components of the cerebral potential evoked by electrical stimulation of human peripheral nervesElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1981
- C0-contraction and stretch reflexes in spasticity during treatment with baclofen.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1977
- RECIPROCAL Ia INHIBITION IN SPASTIC HEMIPLEGIA OF MANBrain, 1976