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1.
The present model of joint angle perception is based on the following hypotheses: the perception and control of joint angle are closely interrelated processes; central motor commands are adequately expressed by shifts of an equilibrium point resulting from the interaction of antagonistic muscles and a load; two fundamental commands-reciprocal (r) and coactivative (c) provide for changes in activity of the antagonistic muscle pair. The dependence of joint angle on static muscle torque and r and c commands is derived (Eq. 5). The following principles of joint position sense are formulated: 1) the r component of the efferent copy plays the role of a reference point which shifts during voluntary regulation of muscle state, but remains unchanged during any passive alterations of joint position; 2) muscle afferent signals deliver not absolute but relative information (i.e. measured relatively to the central reference point). These signals turn out to be related to active muscle torque; 3) the nervous system evaluates muscle afferent signals on the basis of a scale determined by the level of coactivation of the antagonistic muscles. Kinaesthetic illusions appear to be due to disruptions in perception of afferent and/or efferent components of position sense. The present model is consistent with all the variety of kinaesthetic illusions observed experimentally. A qualitative neurophysiological schema for joint angle perception is proposed involving efferent copy and information concerning muscle torque delivered by the tendon organ, muscle spindle, and perhaps, articular receptors. It is known that the cerebellum incorporates both afferent and efferent information concerning movement. One may presume that it plays an essential role in position sense.  相似文献   

2.
The neuromuscular control of the hindlimb of American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) walking on a treadmill was analyzed using simultaneous electromyography (EMG) and cineradiography. EMG and kinematic data were integrated with myological information to discern the interplay of muscles mediating hip and knee movement during the high walk. Twelve muscles, subdivided into 23 individual heads, cross the hip joint of Alligator. Activity patterns of 12 heads of 11 hip muscles and one knee muscle were recorded and quantified. An additional five heads from four muscles were recorded in single individuals. During the stance phase, the caudofemoralis longus prevents hip flexion and actively shortens to retract the femur through an arc of 60–80°. At the same time, the adductor femoris 1 and pubo-ischio-tibialis control femoral abduction. The knee is extended 30–40° during stance by contraction of the femoro-tibialis internus. These stance phase muscles often produce discontinuous, periodic EMG signals within their normal burst profile. In late stance and early swing, the ilio-fibularis and the pubo-ischio-tibialis are responsible for flexing the knee. The limb is protracted by the pubo-ischio-femoralis internus 2 and pubo-ischio-femoralis externus 2, which flex the hip. The ilio-femoralis abducts the limb during swing to suspend it above the tread. The role of the ambiens 1, which is active in midswing, is unclear. The ilio-tibialis 2, flexor-tibialis externus and flexor-tibialis internus 2 yield sporadic, low amplitude EMGs; these muscles are recruited at a very low level, if at all, during the slow high walk. Although EMGs do not conclusively delineate muscle function, activity patterns are particularly helpful in elucidating the complex interaction of muscular heads in this system. J. Morphol. 234:197–212, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
The rationale for the present study was to test the hypothesis that increased work of breathing during experimental deep diving may lead to respiratory muscle fatigue. For this purpose, electromyograms (EMGs) of respiratory and skeletal muscles, plus electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram (EEG) derivatives, were continuously recorded in conscious cats. In each muscle group, the ratio of power in a high (H) to that in a low (L) band of EMG frequencies was computed. Direct diaphragmatic stimulation in selected animals produced a mass action potential to obtain the muscle fiber conduction velocity (MFCV). The maximal pressure was 101 ATA (1,000 msw) with a maximal duration of 72 h. Four cats breathed an He-O2 mixture and five others a ternary mixture (10% N2 in He-O2). Inspired O2 partial pressure was 350 Torr. With the He-O2 mixture, all the animals died within 2-54 h during the study at maximal depth. EEG signs of high-pressure nervous syndrome (HPNS) were present in all cats, and low-frequency (11-14 Hz) hyperbaric tremor discontinuously contaminated all EMG tracings. The H/L ratio computed from diaphragmatic and intercostal muscle EMGs increased after 12 h at 101 ATA. With the He-N2-O2 mixture, the cats survived until the end of the sojourn at 101 ATA, during which no hyperbaric tremor was detected from EMG tracings, and EEG signs of HPNS were weak or absent. From 31 ATA, the H/L ratio decreased significantly in respiratory but not in skeletal muscles; this was associated with decreased MFCV in the diaphragm after several hours at maximal depth.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Electrical stimulation of sub-cortical brain regions (the basal ganglia), known as deep brain stimulation (DBS), is an effective treatment for Parkinson’s disease (PD). Chronic high frequency (HF) DBS in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) or globus pallidus interna (GPi) reduces motor symptoms including bradykinesia and tremor in patients with PD, but the therapeutic mechanisms of DBS are not fully understood. We developed a biophysical network model comprising of the closed loop cortical-basal ganglia-thalamus circuit representing the healthy and parkinsonian rat brain. The network properties of the model were validated by comparing responses evoked in basal ganglia (BG) nuclei by cortical (CTX) stimulation to published experimental results. A key emergent property of the model was generation of low-frequency network oscillations. Consistent with their putative pathological role, low-frequency oscillations in model BG neurons were exaggerated in the parkinsonian state compared to the healthy condition. We used the model to quantify the effectiveness of STN DBS at different frequencies in suppressing low-frequency oscillatory activity in GPi. Frequencies less than 40 Hz were ineffective, low-frequency oscillatory power decreased gradually for frequencies between 50 Hz and 130 Hz, and saturated at frequencies higher than 150 Hz. HF STN DBS suppressed pathological oscillations in GPe/GPi both by exciting and inhibiting the firing in GPe/GPi neurons, and the number of GPe/GPi neurons influenced was greater for HF stimulation than low-frequency stimulation. Similar to the frequency dependent suppression of pathological oscillations, STN DBS also normalized the abnormal GPi spiking activity evoked by CTX stimulation in a frequency dependent fashion with HF being the most effective. Therefore, therapeutic HF STN DBS effectively suppresses pathological activity by influencing the activity of a greater proportion of neurons in the output nucleus of the BG.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship between muscular force modulation and the underlying nervous system control signals has been difficult to quantify for in vivo animal systems. Our goal was to understand how animals alter muscle activation patterns to increase bite forces and to evaluate how accurate these patterns are in predicting crushing forces. We examined the relationship between commonly used measures of cranial muscle activity and force production during feeding events of the striped burrfish (Chilomycterus schoepfi), a mollusc crushing specialist. We quantified the force required to crush a common gastropod prey item (Littorina irrorata) of burrfish using a materials testing device. Burrfish were fed these calibrated prey items while we recorded electromyograms (EMGs) from the main jaw closing muscles (adductor mandibulae A1beta, A2alpha, and A2beta). We quantified EMG activity by measuring the burst duration, rectified integrated area, and then calculated the intensity of activity from these two variables. Least squares regressions relating force to crush (Fcrush) and all EMG variables were calculated for each fish. Multiple regression analyses were used to determine how much of the variation in Fcrush could be explained by muscle activation patterns. We found that 20 cm burrfish are capable of generating extremely high crushing forces (380 N peak force) primarily by increasing the duration of muscle activity. EMG variables explained 71% of the total variation in force production. After accounting for the inherent variation in Fcrush of snails, EMGs do a very good job of predicting bite forces for these fish.  相似文献   

6.
Electromyogram signal (EMG) measurement frequently experiences uncertainty attributed to issues caused by technical constraints such as cross talk and maximum voluntary contraction. Due to these problems, individual EMGs exhibit uncertainty in representing their corresponding muscle activations. To regulate this uncertainty, we proposed an EMG refinement, which refines EMGs with regulating the contribution redundancy of the signals from EMGs to approximating torques through EMG-driven torque estimation (EDTE) using the muscular skeletal forward dynamic model. To regulate this redundancy, we must consider the synergistic contribution redundancy of muscles, including “unmeasured” muscles, to approximating torques, which primarily causes redundancy of EDTE. To suppress this redundancy, we used the concept of muscle synergy, which is a key concept of analyzing the neurophysiological regulation of contribution redundancy of muscles to exerting torques. Based on this concept, we designed a muscle-synergy-based EDTE as a framework for EMG refinement, which regulates the abovementioned uncertainty of individual EMGs in consideration of unmeasured muscles. In achieving the proposed EMG refinement, the most considerable point is to suppress a large change such as overestimation attributed to enhancement of the contribution of particular muscles to estimating torques. Therefore it is reasonable to refine EMGs by minimizing the change in EMGs. To evaluate this model, we used a Bland-Altman plot, which quantitatively evaluates the proportional bias of refined signals to EMGs. Through this evaluation, we showed that the proposed EDTE minimizes the bias while approximating torques. Therefore this minimization optimally regulates the uncertainty of EMGs and thereby leads to optimal EMG refinement.  相似文献   

7.
Complex relationships exist among electromyograms (EMGs) of the upper airway muscles, respective changes in muscle length, and upper airway volume. To test the effects of preventing lung inflation on these relationships, recordings were made of EMGs and length changes of the geniohyoid (GH) and sternohyoid (SH) muscles as well as of tidal changes in upper airway volume in eight anesthetized cats. During resting breathing, tracheal airway occlusion tended to increase the inspiratory lengthening of GH and SH. In response to progressive hypercapnia, the GH eventually shortened during inspiration in all animals; the extent of muscle shortening was minimally augmented by airway occlusion despite substantial increases in EMGs. SH lengthened during inspiration in six of eight animals under hypercapnic conditions, and in these cats lengthening was greater during airway occlusion even though EMGs increased. Despite the above effects on SH and GH length, upper airway tidal volume was increased significantly by tracheal occlusion under hypercapnic conditions. These data suggest that the thoracic and upper airway muscle reflex effects of preventing lung inflation during inspiration act antagonistically on hyoid muscle length, but, because of the mechanical arrangement of the hyoid muscles relative to the airway and thorax, they act agonistically to augment tidal changes in upper airway volume. The augmentation of upper airway tidal volume may occur in part as a result of the effects of thoracic movements being passively transmitted through the hyoid muscles.  相似文献   

8.
Subjects made fast, accurate, consistent wrist flexions under normal conditions and under conditions of low-frequency fatigue. Movements made 1 h after fatiguing exercise were indistinguishable from those made before exercise, even though twitch tensions were only approximately 60% of their fresh values. Electromyograms (EMGs) recorded from the fatigued muscles were, however, different from those recorded before exercise. EMGs during unfatigued movements showed multiple bursts typical for rapid movements. In the presence of low-frequency fatigue, the duration of the first burst was longer than that under normal conditions, and its onset occurred earlier relative to the initiation of movement. The area of the second agonist burst and, in some cases, the antagonist burst, was increased, although changes in their timings were unclear. We conclude that subjects adapted to low-frequency fatigue by changing the neural patterns controlling their muscles and present a simple model of excitation-contraction coupling that demonstrates how the observed changes in excitation can produce the same kinematics.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Electromyograms were recorded from leg muscles of the cockroachGromphadorhina during walking and righting under free-ranging and tethered conditions. Two muscles which are essentially synergistic during walking become antagonistic during righting (Fig. 3, 4). This explains in part the difference in the direction of the leg stroke in the two behaviors (Fig. 2). Other properties of the muscle activity are very similar during the two rhythms: the same motoneurons appear to be active (Fig. 5, 6); cycle frequencies are the same; the burst length of one motoneuron studied varies with burst frequency in a generally similar manner in both behaviors (Fig. 7); inter-leg coordination is the same (Fig. 9); and transganglionic coupling characteristic of walking can occur while a leg on one side is engaged in walking, and its contralateral homologue is engaged in righting (Fig. 10). Although other properties of the leg rhythms are different in walking and righting, these differences appear to result from dissimilarities in sensory feedback. It is concluded that although the two leg rhythms are superficially quite different, the underlying central neuronal rhythms are very similar, and possibly result from activity in the same central oscillatory cell or circuit.We thank Carol Smith for technical assistance. This work was supported by NIH grant #NS09083-05. Computation was done at the New York State Veterinary College Computer Facility which is supported by NIH grant RR 326.  相似文献   

10.
Muscular vibrations were recorded from different relaxed and contracted skeletal muscles in human subjects, with the use of a piezo-electric device. Simultaneous wire-EMG recordings were performed. Spectral analysis of the acceleration curves (vibromyograms) disclosed muscle and function dependent compound frequency patterns. We suggest that the activity of motor units including the action of central reflex loops and oscillatory driving is mainly responsible for the muscular vibrations. Other sources are discussed. Computer-Vibromyography as a mechanical ensemble measurement supplements bioelectric EMG techniques and classical tremor analysis and provides further insights into the function of muscle and motor-system.  相似文献   

11.
We recorded the activity of cerebellar Purkinje cells (PCs), primary motor cortical (M1) neurons, and limb EMG signals while monkeys executed a sequential reaching and button pressing task. PC simple spike discharge generally correlated well with the activity of one or more forelimb muscles. Surprisingly, given the inhibitory projection of PCs, only about one quarter of the correlations were negative. The largest group of neurons burst during movement and were positively correlated with EMG signals, while another significant group burst and were negatively correlated. Among the PCs that paused during movement most were negatively correlated with EMG. The strength of these various correlations was somewhat weaker, on average, than equivalent correlations between M1 neurons and EMG signals. On the other hand, there were no significant differences in the timing of the onset of movement related discharge among these groups of PCs, or between the PCs and M1 neurons. PC discharge was modulated largely in phase, or directly out of phase, with muscle activity. The nearly synchronous activation of PCs and muscles yielded positive correlations, despite the fact that the synaptic effect of the PC discharge is inhibitory. The apparent function of this inhibition is to restrain activity in the limb premotor network, shaping it into a spatiotemporal pattern that is appropriate for controlling the many muscles that participate in this task. The observed timing suggests that the cerebellar cortex learns to modulate PC discharge predictively. Through the cerebellar nucleus, this PC signal is combined with an underlying cerebral cortical signal. In this manner the cerebellum refines the descending command as compared with the relatively crude version generated when the cerebellum is damaged.  相似文献   

12.
Interpretation of surface electromyograms (EMG) is usually based on the assumption that the surface representation of action potentials does not change during their propagation. This assumption does not hold for muscles whose fibers are oblique to the skin. Consequently, the interpretation of surface EMGs recorded from pinnate muscles unlikely prompts from current knowledge. Here we present a complete analytical model that supports the interpretation of experimental EMGs detected from muscles with oblique architecture. EMGs were recorded from the medial gastrocnemius muscle during voluntary and electrically elicited contractions. Preliminary indications obtained from simulated and experimental signals concern the spatial localization of surface potentials and the myoelectric fatigue. Specifically, the spatial distribution of surface EMGs was localized about the fibers superficial extremity. Strikingly, this localization increased with the pinnation angle, both for the simulated EMGs and the recorded M-waves. Moreover, the average rectified value (ARV) and the mean frequency (MNF) of interference EMGs increased and decreased with simulated fatigue, respectively. The degree of variation in ARV and MNF did not depend on the pinnation angle simulated. Similar variations were observed for the experimental EMGs, although being less evident for a higher fiber inclination. These results are discussed on a physiological context, highlighting the relevance of the model proposed here for the interpretation of gastrocnemius EMGs and for conceiving future experiments on muscles with pinnate geometry.  相似文献   

13.
Human brain functions are heavily contingent on neural interactions both at the single neuron and the neural population or system level. Accumulating evidence from neurophysiological studies strongly suggests that coupling of oscillatory neural activity provides an important mechanism to establish neural interactions. With the availability of whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG) macroscopic oscillatory activity can be measured non-invasively from the human brain with high temporal and spatial resolution. To localise, quantify and map oscillatory activity and interactions onto individual brain anatomy we have developed the 'dynamic imaging of coherent sources' (DICS) method which allows to identify and analyse cerebral oscillatory networks from MEG recordings. Using this approach we have characterized physiological and pathological oscillatory networks in the human sensorimotor system. Coherent 8 Hz oscillations emerge from a cerebello-thalamo-premotor-motor cortical network and exert an 8 Hz oscillatory drive on the spinal motor neurons which can be observed as a physiological tremulousness of the movement termed movement discontinuities. This network represents the neurophysiological substrate of a discrete mode of motor control. In parkinsonian resting tremor we have identified an extensive cerebral network consisting of primary motor and lateral premotor cortex, supplementary motor cortex, thalamus/basal ganglia, posterior parietal cortex and secondary somatosensory cortex, which are entrained in the tremor or twice the tremor rhythm. This low frequency entrapment of motor areas likely plays an important role in the pathophysiology of parkinsonian motor symptoms. Finally, studies on patients with postural tremor in hepatic encephalopathy revealed that this type of tremor results from a pathologically slow thalamocortical and cortico-muscular coupling during isometric hold tasks. In conclusion, the analysis of oscillatory cerebral networks provides new insights into physiological mechanisms of motor control and pathophysiological mechanisms of tremor disorders.  相似文献   

14.
Oscillations of the motor cortex interact with similar activity of the spinal motoneuron pool in the 15-30 Hertz frequency range. Recent observations have demonstrated how this interaction affects the firing of single corticospinal neurons. The interaction, reflected as corticomuscular coherence, occurs for both distal and proximal muscles and it constitutes one connection in a larger web of oscillatory interactions, including several other motor areas in the cortex, thalamus, and cerebellum. New results cast light on the possible functional significance of this interaction. The rhythmic interaction may reveal interesting information in several motor disorders, including essential tremor, Parkinson's disease, myoclonus epilepsy, and mirror movements.  相似文献   

15.
Postural muscle activity pattern was examined in the eyes-closed state after adequate adaptation to floor anteroposterior oscillation. Twenty-three subjects were grouped almost evenly according to dominance of anterior or posterior postural muscles in the trunk and thigh during quiet stance. In the posterior-dominant group, this dominance was maintained at every frequency in most subjects. In the anterior-dominant group, this dominance was maintained in most subjects at 0.1 and 0.5 Hz but changed to posterior dominance at 1.0 and 1.5 Hz in about half the subjects. Periodicity of muscle activity was evaluated by EMG amplitude spectrum at the floor oscillation frequency. Periodicity of posterior-dominant muscles in the trunk and thigh increased with increasing oscillatory frequency. In the trunk, the periodicity did not differ significantly between posterior-dominant and anterior-dominant groups. However, in the thigh, periodicity was significantly lower in the anterior-dominant muscles. This was considered to be caused by nonperiodic alternating action of the anterior and posterior muscles. In the lower leg, posterior dominance was observed in quiet stance and at all oscillation frequencies. Periodicity of soleus and gastrocnemius increased at higher frequencies and was higher in gastrocnemius than in soleus. The periodicity difference between both muscles decreased with increasing oscillation frequency.  相似文献   

16.
Resting tremor is the most specific sign for idiopathic Parkinson' disease. It has been proposed that parkinsonian tremor results from the activity of the central oscillators. One of the hypotheses, which have been proposed about the possible principles underlying such central oscillations, is the subthalamic nucleus (STN)-external globus pallidus (GPe)-pacemaker hypothesis. Activity from the central oscillator is proposed to be transmitted via trans-cortical pathways to the periphery. A computational model of the basal ganglia (BG) is proposed for simulating the effects of the internal globus pallidus (GPi)-pedunculopontine (PPN) loop activity on the transmission of the STN-GPe-pacemaker oscillatory activities to the cortex, based on known anatomy and physiology of the BG. According to the result of the simulation, the GPi-PPN loop activity can suppress the transmission of the STN-GPe-pacemaker oscillatory activities to the cortex. This suppressive effect is controlled by various factors such as the strength of the synaptic connection from the PPN to the GPi, the strength of the synaptic connection from the GPi to the PPN, the spontaneous tonic activities of the GPi and PPN, the direct excitatory projections from the STN to the PPN, the frequency of the STN oscillatory burst activity, the duration of the STN burst, and the maximum T-type calcium channel conductance in the type-I PPN neurons.  相似文献   

17.
Adaptation changes in the corticospinal mechanisms of muscle contraction control in athletes were investigated. Using the transcranial magnetic stimulation method, the parameters of motor evoked potentials of skeletal muscles of the lower limbs during voluntary static loads of various intensities and durations were measured. Athletes, as compared to the reference group, exhibited a greater increase in the maximal amplitude of the motor evoked potentials of the skeletal muscles of the lower limbs, a smaller decrease in the central motor conduction time of nerve pulses and the peripheral period in electromyograms, and a smaller increase in the cortical and segmental silent periods with increasing intensity and duration of isometric muscle contractions. The mechanisms of adaptation of corticospinal regulation of human muscle contraction to specific conditions of extreme motor activities are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
We hypothesized that the hyperinflation and pulmonary dysfunction of cystic fibrosis (CF) would distort feedback and therefore alter the abdominal muscle response to graded expiratory threshold loads (ETLs). We compared the respiratory and abdominal muscle responses with graded ETLs of seven CF patients with severe lung dysfunction with those of matched healthy control subjects in the supine and 60 degrees head-up positions. Breathing frequency, tidal volume, and ventilatory timing were determined from inspiratory flow recordings. Abdominal electromyograms (EMGs) were detected with surface electrodes placed unilaterally over the external and internal oblique and the rectus abdominis muscles. Thresholds, times of onset, and durations of phasic abdominal activity were determined from raw EMGs; peak amplitudes were determined from integrated EMGs. Graded ETLs were imposed by submerging a tube from the expiratory port of the breathing valve into a column of water at depths of 0-25 cmH2O. We found that breathing frequency, tidal volume, and expired minute ventilation were higher in CF patients than in control subjects during low ETLs; a change in body position did not alter these ventilatory responses in the CF patients but did in the control subjects. All CF patients, but none of the control subjects, had tonic abdominal activity while supine. CF patients recruited abdominal muscles at lower loads, earlier in the respiratory cycle, and to a higher recruitment level in both positions than the control subjects, but burst duration of phasic activity was not different between groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Oscillatory neuronal synchronization between cortical areas has been suggested to constitute a flexible mechanism to coordinate information flow in the human cerebral cortex. However, it remains unclear whether synchronized neuronal activity merely represents an epiphenomenon or whether it is causally involved in the selective gating of information. Here, we combined bilateral high-density transcranial alternating current stimulation (HD-tACS) at 40 Hz with simultaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings to study immediate electrophysiological effects during the selective entrainment of oscillatory gamma-band signatures. We found that interhemispheric functional connectivity was modulated in a predictable, phase-specific way: In-phase stimulation enhanced synchronization, anti-phase stimulation impaired functional coupling. Perceptual correlates of these connectivity changes were found in an ambiguous motion task, which strongly support the functional relevance of long-range neuronal coupling. Additionally, our results revealed a decrease in oscillatory alpha power in response to the entrainment of gamma band signatures. This finding provides causal evidence for the antagonistic role of alpha and gamma oscillations in the parieto-occipital cortex and confirms that the observed gamma band modulations were physiological in nature. Our results demonstrate that synchronized cortical network activity across several spatiotemporal scales is essential for conscious perception and cognition.  相似文献   

20.
Details and concepts of intramuscular, extramuscular and intermuscular myofascial force transmission are reviewed. Some new experimental data are added regarding myofascial force transmission between antagonistic muscles across the interosseal membrane of the lower hind limb of the rat. Combined with other result presented in this issue, it can be concluded that myofascial force transmission occurs between all muscles within a limb segment. This means that force generated within sarcomeres of an antagonistic muscle may be exerted at the tendon of target muscle or its synergists.

Some, in vivo, but initial indications for intersegmental myofascial force transmission are discussed. The concept of myofascial force transmission as an additional load on the muscle proved to be fruitful in the analysis of its muscular effects. In spastic paresis and for healthy muscles distal myofascial loads are often encountered, but cannot fully explain the movement limitations in spastic paresis. Therefore, the concept of simultaneous and opposing myofascial loads is analyzed and used to formulate a hypothesis for explaining the movement limitation: Myofascially transmitted antagonistic force is borne by the spastic muscle, but subsequently transmitted again to distal tendons of synergistic muscles.  相似文献   


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