SPINAL MOTOR-NEURON EXCITABILITY DURING THE CUTANEOUS SILENT PERIOD

Citation
Aa. Leis et al., SPINAL MOTOR-NEURON EXCITABILITY DURING THE CUTANEOUS SILENT PERIOD, Muscle & nerve, 18(12), 1995, pp. 1464-1470
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
0148639X
Volume
18
Issue
12
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1464 - 1470
Database
ISI
SICI code
0148-639X(1995)18:12<1464:SMEDTC>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The physiologic mechanisms generating the cutaneous silent period (CSP ) remain uncertain. It is not known whether the CSP occurs because of inexcitability of the spinal motor neuron, We, therefore, assessed exc itability of the motor neuron during the CSP using F-wave responses, H -reflexes were also elicited during the CSP, Electrical stimulation to the fifth digit produced the CSP in the voluntarily contracting abduc tor pollicis brevis muscle (APE), Median nerve stimulation al the wris t elicited control F or H responses during isometric APB contraction ( condition 1) and in resting muscle (condition 2), Control amplitudes w ere compared to those elicited in the midst of the CSP. In Condition 1 , F-wave amplitudes and frequency during the CSP were unchanged compar ed with controls, However, F-waves were increased in amplitude and fre quency during the CSP (P < 0.001) relative to responses elicited in re sting muscle (condition 2), H-reflexes during the CSP were suppressed (P < 0.001) compared with controls elicited during contraction (condit ion 1), but facilitated relative to the resting state (condition 2) in which no H-reflexes were elicitable. We conclude that spinal motor ne urons remain excitable to antidromic volleys at the same time that the corticospinal volley is inhibited to produce the CSP, Moreover, motor neuron excitability appears to be increased during the CSP compared t o the relaxed state. (C) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.