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J Neurophysiol (January 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00386.2002
Submitted on Submitted 23 May 2002; accepted in final form 5 September 2002
Division of Neurophysiology, Department of Medical Physiology, The Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, 2200 Copenhagen, Denmark
Pyndt, H. S. and
J. B. Nielsen.
Modulation of Transmission in the Corticospinal and Group Ia
Afferent Pathways to Soleus Motoneurons During Bicycling. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 304-314, 2003. Transmission in the corticospinal
and Ia pathways to soleus motoneurons was investigated in healthy human
subjects during bicycling. Soleus H reflexes and motor evoked
potentials (MEPs) after transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) were
modulated similarly during the crank cycle being large during
downstroke [concomitant with soleus background electromyographic (EMG)
activity] and small during upstroke. Tibialis anterior MEPs were in
contrast large during upstroke and small during downstroke. The soleus
H reflexes and MEPs were also recorded during tonic plantarflexion at a
similar ankle joint position, corresponding ankle angle, and matched
background EMG activity as during the different phases of bicycling.
Relative to their size during tonic plantarflexion, the MEPs were found to be facilitated in the early part of downstroke during bicycling, whereas the H reflexes were depressed in the late part of downstroke. The intensity of TMS was decreased below MEP threshold and used to
condition the soleus H reflex. At short intervals (conditioning-test intervals of
3 to
1 ms), TMS produced a facilitation of the H
reflex that is in all likelihood caused by activation of the fast
monosynaptic corticospinal pathway. This facilitation was significantly
larger in the early part of downstroke during bicycling than during
tonic plantarflexion. This suggests that the increased MEP during
downstroke was caused by changes in transmission in the fast
monosynaptic corticospinal pathway. To investigate whether the
depression of H reflexes in the late part of downstroke was caused by
increased presynaptic inhibition of Ia afferents, the soleus H reflex
was conditioned by stimulation of the femoral nerve. At a short
interval (conditioning-test interval:
7 to
5 ms), the femoral nerve
stimulation produced a facilitation of the H reflex that is mediated by
the heteronymous monosynaptic Ia pathway from the femoral nerve to
soleus motoneurons. Within the initial 0.5 ms after its onset, the size
of this facilitation depends on the level of presynaptic inhibition of
the Ia afferents, which mediate the facilitation. The size of the
facilitation was strongly depressed in the late part of downstroke,
compared with the early part of downstroke, suggesting that increased
presynaptic inhibition was indeed responsible for the depression of the
H reflex. These findings suggest that there is a selectively increased transmission in the fast monosynaptic corticospinal pathway to soleus
motoneurons in early downstroke during bicycling. It would seem likely
that one cause of this is increased excitability of the involved
cortical neurons. The increased presynaptic inhibition of Ia afferents
in late downstroke may be of importance for depression of stretch
reflex activity before and during upstroke.
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