M. Inghilleri et al., SILENT PERIOD IN UPPER-LIMB MUSCLES AFTER NOXIOUS CUTANEOUS STIMULATION IN MAN, ELECTROMYOGRAPHY AND MOTOR CONTROL-ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 105(2), 1997, pp. 109-115
We studied the effect of electrical stimulation of the C5-C8 dermatome
s on voluntary electromyographic activity (EMG) recorded from the ipsi
lateral first dorsal interosseus (FDI), abductor digiti minimi, flexor
and extensor carpi, triceps brachii, biceps brachii, and orbicularis
oculi muscles of healthy humans. Finger stimulation (C6-C8) produced a
n EMG inhibition (silent period, SP), which progressively decreased in
duration from distal to proximal muscles; in the biceps it induced a
slight facilitation and in the orbicularis oculi muscle, it had no eff
ect. Stimulation of the C5 dermatome induced no response in either dis
tal or proximal muscles. Only high-intensity stimuli evoked clear sile
nt periods. The threshold for evoking an SP was almost double that req
uired for sensory action potentials, 3.25 times the sensory threshold,
and decidedly above the pain threshold. An indirect estimation of the
conduction velocity of SP afferent fibres placed them in the A-delta
group of myelinated fibres. In double-shock experiments, used to study
the recovery cycle of the SP in the FDI muscle after finger stimulati
on, neither low- nor high-intensity conditioning stimuli delivered 100
-500 ms before the test stimulus changed test SPs. Experiments designe
d to evaluate motoneuronal excitability showed that in relaxed FDI mus
cle, finger stimulation markedly reduced the F wave at the 50 ms time
interval, the time when the SP normally occurs. Our findings demonstra
te that the activation of A-delta afferents from the fingers inhibits
the C7-T1 motoneurons postsynaptically, through an oligosynaptic spina
l circuit. We propose that the strong inhibitory effect exerted by nox
ious cutaneous stimuli on all distal muscles may contribute to a defen
ce action which is specific for the human upper limb. (C) 1997 Elsevie
r Science Ireland Ltd.