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J Neurophysiol 80: 3369-3372, 1998;
0022-3077/98 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 80 No. 6 December 1998, pp. 3369-3372
Copyright ©1998 The American Physiological Society

RAPID COMMUNICATION


Damping in Reflexively Active and Areflexive Lengthening Muscle Evaluated With Inertial Loads

David C. Lin1 and W. Zev Rymer1, 2

1 Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Physiology, Northwestern University; and 2 Veterans Administration Lakeside Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois 60611

Lin, David C. and W. Zev Rymer. Damping in reflexively active and areflexive lengthening muscle evaluated with inertial loads. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 3369-3372, 1998. Studies of active areflexive muscle have shown that during a constant velocity stretch the increment in force elicited by an incremental length change falls dramatically after a few hundred micrometers of stretch, a finding labeled as "muscle yield." The mechanical behavior after the yield was like a viscous damper, in that force varied only with velocity. In light of these observations, our aims were to determine whether viscous properties are also evident under more physiological conditions, specifically under inertial loading, and to evaluate the damping action of reflexively intact compared with that of deafferented muscle. The active soleus muscle in a decerebrate cat was forcibly stretched by a simulated inertia with a specified initial velocity. We compared muscle length changes when afferent pathways were intact with those recorded after cutting the dorsal roots. Our findings were that areflexive muscle showed highly damped responses, with large changes in mean muscle length, indicative of high viscosity relative to stiffness. In contrast, reflexively active muscle produced lightly damped oscillations, with minimal changes in mean length, reflecting low viscosity and high stiffness. It appears that the stretch reflect modifies the relative contributions of elastic and viscous-like forces, maintaining elasticity, which in turn sustains oscillations. These differences highlight tradeoffs between positional and velocity regulation, in that elastic properties of reflexively active muscle promote oscillations with modest change in mean muscle length, whereas viscous-like properties of areflexive muscle produce damped responses, with poor positional regulation.




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