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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 3 March 2001, pp. 1059-1066
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University; and 2The Sensory Motor Performance Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60611
Lin, David C. and
W.
Zev Rymer.
Damping Actions of the Neuromuscular System With Inertial Loads:
Human Flexor Pollicis Longus Muscle. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1059-1066, 2001. Our previous work in an animal
model showed that neuromuscular damping properties help maintain limb
posture by effectively dissipating mechanical energy arising from
disturbances. The purpose of this study was to determine whether
similar damping properties were expressed in intact, normal human
muscles. To review briefly, when the reflexively active soleus muscle
in a decerebrate cat is coupled to an inertial load, application of a
force impulse to the load results in lightly damped oscillations. By
calculating the logarithmic decrement in muscle velocity following the
impulse (the decrement being related to the amount of energy dissipated from the inertia), we found that damping increased with oscillation amplitude, a nonlinear property. This nonlinearity represents an
automatic compensation for larger perturbations. Our findings in
parallel experiments on the interphalangeal joint of the human thumb
were that the long thumb flexor, the flexor pollicis longus (FPL),
displayed mechanical and reflex behavior closely comparable to that
reported earlier for the cat soleus, despite differences in
architectural and metabolic properties between these muscles. Specifically, by selecting experimental trials that did not include voluntary interventions, we observed amplitude-dependent differences in
damping in which larger amplitude movements elicited larger damping
than did smaller movements. In addition, even after accounting for
amplitude-dependent differences in damping, damping was found to be
larger in later cycles than in the first cycle. This nonlinearity indicates that both mechanical properties of muscle and reflex mechanisms are dependent on prior movement history. We propose that
this history-dependent behavior arises from the effects of prior
movement on stretch reflex gain, and these effects are mediated primarily via changes in muscle spindle properties. Recordings of
electromyographic activity from the FPL, during the first and second
cycles of oscillation supported this postulate of a reduced reflex gain
following prior motion. The functional significance of these nonlinear
damping properties is that during the initial muscle stretch, the
stiffness is high, which helps to preserve the initial position
(although at the expense of promoting oscillation). Subsequently, the
ensuing increase in damping helps suppress continuing oscillation. This
sequence of varying mechanical properties is broadly analogous to the
features of a predictive, or feed-forward controller, designed to
produce a response that initially maintains position, and subsequently
dampens oscillations. These results show that the intrinsic properties
of muscle and spinal reflexes automatically provide a complex
time-varying response, appropriate for maintenance of stable limb posture.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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V. K. Haftel, E. K. Bichler, T. R. Nichols, M. J. Pinter, and T. C. Cope Movement Reduces the Dynamic Response of Muscle Spindle Afferents and Motoneuron Synaptic Potentials in Rat J Neurophysiol, May 1, 2004; 91(5): 2164 - 2171. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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