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A comparison of peripheral and rubrospinal synaptic input to slow and fast twitch motor units of triceps surae

R. E. Burke, +2 more
- 01 May 1970 - 
- Vol. 207, Iss: 3, pp 709-732
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TLDR
Post‐synaptic potentials evoked by electrical stimulation of a variety of input systems have been compared in triceps surae motoneurones innervating slow and fast muscle units, the speed of contraction of which was determined.
Abstract
1. Post-synaptic potentials (PSPs) evoked by electrical stimulation of a variety of input systems have been compared in triceps surae motoneurones innervating slow and fast muscle units, the speed of contraction of which was also determined. 2. Stimulation of high threshold afferents in both flexor and extensor muscle nerves, and of joint afferents, evoked polysynaptic PSPs which were predominantly hyperpolarizing in both fast and slow twitch motor units. 3. Volleys in cutaneous afferents in the sural and saphenous nerves evoked polysynaptic PSPs composed of mixtures of inhibitory and excitatory components. The inhibitory components were predominant in slow twitch motor units, while in fast twitch units there was a trend towards excitatory predominance. 4. Repetitive stimulation of the red nucleus caused predominantly inhibitory PSPs in slow twitch units and mixed or predominantly excitatory PSPs in fast twitch units. There was a correlation in the excitatory/inhibitory balance between PSPs of cutaneous and rubrospinal origin in those motoneurones in which both types of PSPs were studied. 5. The amplitudes of group Ia disynaptic inhibitory PSPs were found to be correlated with motor unit twitch type: IPSPs in slow twitch units were larger than those in fast twitch units. Rubrospinal conditioning volleys were found to facilitate group Ia IPSPs in both fast and slow twitch motor units. 6. The results suggest that there may be several basic patterns of synaptic input organization to motoneurones within a given motor unit pool. In addition to quantitative variation in synaptic distribution, there is evidence that qualitative differences in excitatory to inhibitory balance also exist in the pathways conveying input from cutaneous afferents and rubrospinal systems to triceps surae motoneurones. These qualitative differences are correlated with the motor unit twitch type.

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Strength of two- and one-leg extension in man.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that two-leg strength in general is lower than the sum of the strength of the right and left legs, and that this phenomenon is found even after intensive endurance or strength training, however, familiarization with the experimental apparatus can increase the relative two- leg strength.
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Neural mechanisms that contribute to cyclical modulation of the soleus H-reflex in walking in humans

TL;DR: Modulation of the soleus H-reflex is not simply a reflection of the background excitability of the motoneuron pool, and the modulation is not dependent on activation of the antagonist muscle.
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Changes in segmental reflexes following chronic spinal cord hemisection in the cat

TL;DR: Conference of monosynaptic test reflexes was used to study changes of both excitatory and inhibitory effects on specified motoneuronal pools and showed that facilitatory effects were larger on the side of hemisection in a clear majority of cases.
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Electron microscopic studies of serially sectioned cat spinal α-motoneurons. IV. Motoneurons innervating slow-twitch (type s) units of the soleus muscle

TL;DR: Two intracellularly stained cat α‐motoneurons of the soleus‐S type (Burke et al., '74) were studied ultrastructurally and showed no clustering around the dendritic roots and were absent on the axon hillock.
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Modulation of the Triceps Surae H-Reflex with Training

TL;DR: The progressive reduction in the H-reflex gain with short-term training may represent functional adaptation in the central nervous system and support the notion of longer-term adaptability of the spinal stretch reflex.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Functional significance of cell size in spinal motoneurons

TL;DR: The present paper is concerned with the central part of the motoneuron and the significance of its size in synaptic transmission and asks whether the cell bodies (and dendrites) connected with large and small motor fibers have different functional properties which can be recognized by their discharge characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuron patterns controlling transmission of ipsilateral hind limb reflexes in cat

TL;DR: The results of experiments designed to resolve the segmental reflex into its functional components are described, finding that group I and group II fibers are the lowest threshold fibers in muscle and cutaneous nerves respectively, and may be excited in isolation by the simple expedient of selecting the appropriate nerves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor unit types of cat triceps surae muscle

TL;DR: Motor units, defined as including a motoneurone (cell body, dendrites and axon) plus the muscle unit innervated, have been examined in the triceps surae motor pool of pentobarbital anaesthetized cats.
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