Arm cycling increases the short-latency reflex from ankle dorsiflexor afferents to knee extensor muscles
Autor: | Tomoyoshi Komiyama, Shigeki Omori, Genki Futatsubashi, Tsuyoshi Nakajima, Syusaku Sasada, Toshiki Tazoe |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Physiology Movement Stimulation Isometric exercise Physical medicine and rehabilitation Tibialis anterior muscle Reflex Reaction Time medicine Humans Knee Muscle Skeletal Motor Neurons business.industry General Neuroscience Peroneal Nerve Evoked Potentials Motor medicine.anatomical_structure Arm Female Ankle Cycling business Cadence Common peroneal nerve Muscle Contraction |
Zdroj: | Journal of Neurophysiology. 125:110-119 |
ISSN: | 1522-1598 0022-3077 |
Popis: | Low-intensity electrical stimulation of the common peroneal nerve (CPN) evokes a short latency reflex in the heteronymous knee extensor muscles (referred to as the CPN reflex). The CPN reflex is facilitated at a heel strike during walking, contributing to body weight support. However, the origin of the CPN reflex increase during walking remains unclear. We speculate that this increase originates from multiple sources due to a body of evidence suggesting the presence of neural coupling between the arms and legs. Therefore, we investigated the extent to which the CPN reflex is modulated during rhythmic arm cycling. Twenty-eight subjects sat in an armchair and were asked to perform arm cycling at a moderate cadence using a stationary ergometer while performing isometric contraction of the knee extensors, such that the CPN reflex was evoked. The CPN reflex was evoked by stimulating the CPN [0.9-2.0× the motor threshold (MT) in the tibialis anterior muscle] at the level of the neck of the fibula. The CPN-reflex amplitude was measured from the vastus lateralis (VL). The biphasic reflex response in the VL was evoked within 27-45 ms following CPN stimulation. The amplitude of the CPN reflex increased during arm cycling compared with that before cycling. The modulation of the CPN reflex during arm cycling was detected only for CPN stimulation intensity around 1.2× MT. Furthermore, CPN-reflex modulation was not observed during the isometric contraction of the arm or passive arm cycling. Our results suggest the presence of neural coupling between the CPN-reflex pathways and neural systems generating locomotive arm movement.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Whether locomotive arm movements contribute to the control of the reflex pathway from ankle dorsiflexor afferents to knee extensor muscles [common peroneal nerve (CPN)-reflex] is an unresolved issue. The CPN reflex in the stationary leg was facilitated only by arm cycling, and not by passive or isometric motor tasks. Our results suggest that the arm locomotor system modulates the reflex pathway from ankle dorsiflexor afferents to the knee extensor muscles. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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