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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 5 November 1999, pp. 2839-2846
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
RAPID COMMUNICATION
Department of Basic Sciences, Medical School, University of Crete, 71110 Heraklion, Crete, Greece
Erimaki, Sophia and
Constantinos N. Christakos.
Occurrence of Widespread Motor-Unit Firing Correlations in Muscle
Contractions: Their Role in the Generation of Tremor and Time-Varying
Voluntary Force. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 2839-2846, 1999. The firing behavior of motor units
(MUs) of the first dorsal interrosseus muscle of the hand was examined
during both constant-force and varying-force (sinusoidal or broadband
random variations) isometric contractions in healthy adults. The
emphasis was on the analysis of MU synchrony with an efficient and
sensitive method. In static contractions, widespread and
strong MU firing correlations, with the MUs in phase, were present at
the frequency of muscle tremor, when the tremor was regular
(narrowband) and large. MU correlations could also exist in
contractions where the tremor of a subject was irregular (broadband)
overall, but they were generally weak. These correlations were at the
frequency of the subject's regular tremor, and the corresponding
distinct tremor component was sometimes discernible within the broad
tremor-band. In contrast, the MUs did not show any such correlations in
the case of purely irregular and small tremor. On the basis of these observations, it is concluded that the rhythms in the force
contributions of the last- recruited, large MUs, which fire near their
threshold rate, compose the broadband frequency content of
physiological muscle tremor in every contraction. Within this band,
there is an additional distinct tremor component when MU correlations
are present. For widespread and strong MU correlations, this component dominates and constitutes the observed regular tremor. In
dynamic contractions, the firing of all MUs was
modulated in the frequency band of both the sinusoidal and the complex
variations of the force. The MU modulations showed a time-lead over the
force variations and were strongly correlated both to these variations
and among themselves. Thus widespread and strong correlations of MU
firing modulations seem to provide a mechanism for generation of
time-varying voluntary force, under general dynamic conditions.
Finally, when regular tremor was present in dynamic contractions,
widespread and fairly strong MU correlations also existed at the tremor
frequency. It is concluded that at least two mechanisms can cause
widespread MU synchrony, and they can act in parallel. They involve two
types of correlated inputs to the
-motoneurons (presumably from the muscle spindles and the cortex), whose effects combine at the level of
the membrane potential of the cells.
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