Zehr E Paul, Frigon Alain, Hoogenboom Nienke, Collins David F
Rehabilitation Neuroscience Laboratory, University of Victoria, PO Box 3010 STN CSC, V8W 3P1, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2004 Dec;159(3):382-8. doi: 10.1007/s00221-004-2092-x. Epub 2004 Oct 8.
Neural connections between the cervical and lumbosacral spinal cord may assist in arm and leg coordination during locomotion. Currently the extent to which arm activity can modulate reflex excitability of leg muscles is not fully understood. We showed recently that rhythmic arm movement significantly suppresses soleus H-reflex amplitude probably via modification of presynaptic inhibition of the IA afferent pathway. Further, during walking reflexes evoked in leg muscles by stimulation of a cutaneous nerve at the wrist (superficial radial nerve; SR) are phase and task dependent. However, during walking both the arms and legs are rhythmically active thus it is difficult to identify the locus of such modulation. Here we examined the influence of SR nerve stimulation on transmission through the soleus H-reflex pathway in the leg during static contractions and during rhythmic arm movements. Nerve stimulation was delivered with the right shoulder in flexion or extension. H-reflexes were evoked alone (unconditioned) or with cutaneous conditioning via stimulation of the SR nerve (also delivered alone without H-reflex in separate trials). SR nerve stimulation significantly facilitated H-reflex amplitude during static contractions with the arm extended and countered the suppression of reflex amplitude induced by arm cycling. The results demonstrate that cutaneous feedback from the hand on to the soleus H-reflex pathway in the legs is not suppressed during rhythmic arm movement. This contrasts with the observation that rhythmic arm movement suppresses facilitation of soleus H-reflex when cutaneous nerves innervating the leg are stimulated. In conjunction with other data taken during walking, this suggests that the modulation of transmission through pathways from the SR nerve to the lumbosacral spinal cord is partly determined by rhythmic activity of both the arms and legs.
颈脊髓和腰骶脊髓之间的神经连接可能有助于运动过程中手臂和腿部的协调。目前,手臂活动对腿部肌肉反射兴奋性的调节程度尚不完全清楚。我们最近发现,有节奏的手臂运动可能通过改变IA传入通路的突触前抑制作用,显著抑制比目鱼肌H反射的幅度。此外,在行走过程中,通过刺激手腕处的皮神经(桡浅神经;SR)在腿部肌肉中诱发的反射是相位和任务依赖性的。然而,在行走过程中,手臂和腿部都有节奏地活动,因此很难确定这种调节的位点。在这里,我们研究了SR神经刺激对腿部比目鱼肌H反射通路在静态收缩和有节奏的手臂运动过程中传递的影响。神经刺激在右肩屈曲或伸展时进行。单独诱发H反射(非条件反射)或通过刺激SR神经进行皮肤条件反射(在单独试验中也单独给予刺激而不诱发H反射)。在手臂伸展的静态收缩过程中,SR神经刺激显著促进了H反射的幅度,并抵消了手臂循环运动引起的反射幅度抑制。结果表明,在有节奏的手臂运动过程中,手部向腿部比目鱼肌H反射通路的皮肤反馈并未受到抑制。这与以下观察结果形成对比:当刺激支配腿部的皮神经时,有节奏的手臂运动会抑制比目鱼肌H反射的易化。结合行走过程中获取的其他数据,这表明从SR神经到腰骶脊髓的通路传递调节部分由手臂和腿部的有节奏活动决定。