scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of length and force feedback to soleus muscles of decerebrate cats.

J C Houk, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 6, pp 784-811
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This work has attempted to determine whether or not this regulation of force by signals from tendon organs is significant in decerebrate cats.
Abstract
IT IS NOW WELL KNOWN that contraction of a muscle is reflexly excited by responses of its spindle receptors to stretch (32, 34) and is reflexly inhibited by responses of its Golgi tendon organs to contraction (10, 31). Many experimental techniques have been used to confirm these observations (7, 12, 23). Nevertheless, the actual importance of each of these reflexes in the gradation of contraction remains obscure because of the lack of an experimental approach which is capable of estimating quantitatively their respective influences (39). Formerly it was believed by many that tendon organs responded and inhibited contraction on1 .y when muscular forces became excessive. Recent studies (19, 26) have cast doubt on this hypothesis by demonstrating for these receptors a much lower threshold to must ular contract ion than was previ not ouslv t .h assure ought. This find .ing alone does a con tinuo us regulation of muscular force by signals from tendon organs since impulses must be transmitted through one or two interneurons before they may inhibit homonymous motoneurons (7, 31). Studies have shown that these Ib pathways transmit impulses more effectively in spinal than in decerebrate cats (8). It is therefore likely that the gain of this reflex pathway is not constant but, rather, is subject to control by signals from various regions of the nervous system. For example, Ib pathways are facilitated by signals transmitted from the red nucleus (IS). As a result, the relative importance of tendon organs in the regulation of contraction would depend on the particular state of the experimental animal. We have attempted to determine whether or not this regulation of force is significant in decerebrate cats.

read more

Citations
More filters
OtherDOI

Integration in Spinal Neuronal Systems

TL;DR: The sections in this article are: Methodological Considerations, General Summary and Epilogue, Ascending Pathways that Monitor Segmental Interneuronal Activity, and Evidence That Ascending FRA Pathways Monitor Activity in interneurons of Reflex Pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulatory actions of human stretch reflex

TL;DR: It is confirmed that most subjects can suppress triggered reactions when the instruction calls for no intervention, leaving an unmodified reflex response, which implies the existence of and compensation for nonlinear muscle mechanical properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies for the control of voluntary movements with one mechanical degree of freedom

TL;DR: The theory applies to movements across different distances, with different inertial loads, toward targets of different widths over a wide range of experimentally manipulated velocities and reconciles many apparent conflicts in the motor control literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of Stiffness by Skeletomotor Reflexes

TL;DR: This article reviews recent evidence indicating that the dominant opinion that stretch and unloading reflexes function to control the length of a muscle in opposition to changes in mechanical load is wrong and develops an alternative idea that neither muscle length nor force are regulated as individual vari­ ables, but that a property called stiffness is maintained relatively constant by skeletomotor reflexes.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Rhythmic excitation of a stretch reflex, revealing (a) hysteresis and (b) a difference between the responses to pulling and to stretching.

TL;DR: When sinusoidally fluctuating tensions were applied to the soleus muscle of a decerebrate cat, plots of tension against length showed a hysteresis loop, implying damping, which was not frequency-dependent and indicated a “distributed simple friction” mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence that the secondary as well as the primary endings of the muscle spindles may be responsible for the tonic stretch reflex of the decerebrate cat

TL;DR: The size of the tonic stretch reflex of the soleus or gastrocnemius muscle of the decerebrate cat has been compared with the size of a reflex contraction elicited in the same muscle by high‐frequency vibration applied to its tendon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modifications of neural output signals by muscles: a frequency response study.

TL;DR: Computer-generated stimulus patterns were used to study the response of cat skeletal muscle to nerve signals of changing impulse rates and isometric tension responses were recorded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observations on the fusimotor fibres of the tibialis posterior muscle of the cat

TL;DR: Whether the static and dynamic fusimotor fibres of tibialis posterior differ in conduction velocity, even though those of soleus do not (Crowe & Matthews, 1964b) is determined.
Related Papers (5)