Activity of spindle afferents from cat anterior thigh muscles. III. Effects of external stimuli.

Chronically implanted electrodes were used to record the activity of identified single muscle spindle afferents in awake cats during responses to various types of manual and electrical stimulation. During vigorous cyclical responses such as shaking and scratching, spindle afferents generally maintained at least some activity during both lengthening and shortening of the parent muscle, indicating that the programs for these movements include both extra- and intrafusal recruitment. During noncyclical responses such as ipsilateral limb withdrawal and crossed-extension, spindle activity was modest and poorly correlated with extrafusal activity. Weak cutaneous nerve shocks during walking elicited complex excitatory and inhibitory phase-dependent reflexes in the various muscles studied but caused relatively little change in spindle afferent activity, indicating a lack of correlation between alpha and gamma motoneuron activity. A primary and a secondary afferent from sartorius muscle were recorded simultaneously during walking cycles that were perturbed by electrically induced twitches of the antagonist hamstring muscles; both demonstrated highly sensitive, short latency responses to the resulting skeletal motion, consistent with their previously suggested roles in detecting small brief mechanical perturbations. The degree to which fusimotor responses were correlated with extrafusal responses to somatosensory perturbations was highly dependent on the specific nature of the stimulus and the response. Fusimotor reprogramming of the spindle sensitivity appears to be a feature of cyclical movements that are presumably under proprioceptive control, whereas brief perturbations within the context of a particular motor program may be ignored by the fusimotor system.

[1]  P. Bessou,et al.  Cinematographic analysis of contractile events produced in intrafusal muscle fibres by stimulation of static and dynamic fusimotor axons. , 1975, The Journal of physiology.

[2]  R. Granit The functional role of the muscle spindles--facts and hypotheses. , 1975, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[3]  I. A. Boyd,et al.  Control of dynamic and static nuclear bag fibres and nuclear chain fibres by gamma and beta axons in isolated cat muscle spindels. , 1977, The Journal of physiology.

[4]  K. S. Murthy,et al.  Vertebrate fusimotor neurones and their influences on motor behavior , 1978, Progress in Neurobiology.

[5]  G E Loeb,et al.  A pulsed integrator for EMG analysis. , 1979, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[6]  A. Vallbo,et al.  Somatosensory, proprioceptive, and sympathetic activity in human peripheral nerves. , 1979, Physiological reviews.

[7]  J. Duysens,et al.  Modulation of ipsi- and contralateral reflex responses in unrestrained walking cats. , 1980, Journal of neurophysiology.

[8]  V. Edgerton,et al.  Rapid ankle extension during paw shakes: selective recruitment of fast ankle extensors. , 1980, Journal of neurophysiology.

[9]  G. E. Loeb,et al.  Single unit conduction velocities from averaged nerve cuff electrode records in freely moving cats , 1981, Journal of Neuroscience Methods.

[10]  D. Burke,et al.  The irrelevance of fusimotor activity to the achilles tendon jerk of relaxed humans , 1981, Annals of neurology.

[11]  Proprioceptive input from the jaw muscles and its influence on lapping, chewing, and posture. , 1981, Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology.

[12]  Gerald E. Loeb,et al.  Optimal control principles for sensory transducers , 1985 .

[13]  G E Loeb,et al.  Activity of spindle afferents from cat anterior thigh muscles. I. Identification and patterns during normal locomotion. , 1985, Journal of neurophysiology.

[14]  M. Hoy,et al.  Intralimb coordination of the paw-shake response: a novel mixed synergy. , 1985, Journal of neurophysiology.

[15]  G. Loeb,et al.  Activity of spindle afferents from cat anterior thigh muscles. II. Effects of fusimotor blockade. , 1985, Journal of neurophysiology.