TENDON TAP INDUCES A SINGLE LONG-LASTING EXCITATORY REFLEX IN THE MOTONEURONS OF HUMAN SOLEUS MUSCLE

Citation
Ks. Turker et al., TENDON TAP INDUCES A SINGLE LONG-LASTING EXCITATORY REFLEX IN THE MOTONEURONS OF HUMAN SOLEUS MUSCLE, Experimental Brain Research, 115(1), 1997, pp. 169-173
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00144819
Volume
115
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
169 - 173
Database
ISI
SICI code
0014-4819(1997)115:1<169:TTIASL>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
The reflex responses of the soleus motor units to Achilles tendon taps were investigated. Two different techniques were used to analyse the motor unit data. The first approach was the classical technique which involved building peristimulus time histograms (PSTH) from the firing times of single motor units. The second approach was a relatively unus ed technique that involved plotting the instantaneous discharge freque ncy of the single motor unit against time (peristimulus frequencygram or PSF), Using PSTH as the indicator, we found that the tap to the ten don induced three separate reflex responses: the first response was a very short-lasting excitatory response or the jerk reflex, the second was a period of relative silence (silent period or the ''trough''), an d the third was a broad peak 170 ms after the stimulus. Using the same motor unit data, the PSF technique indicated that the tap to the tend on induced a single long-lasting excitatory reflex. The PSF displayed an increase starting from the latency of the jerk reflex and continuin g for about 65 ms. There was no significant change in the discharge fr equency at the end of the first excitatory response. Since the dischar ge frequency of a motoneuron has a strong positive linear relationship with the effective synaptic current it receives, it is suggested that throughout the 65ms period the net (effective) synaptic drive to the soleus motoneurons was excitatory. It is therefore concluded that tend on tap induces a single long-lasting excitatory reflex in the motoneur ons of the soleus muscle.