Hockensmith Gregory B, Lowell Soren Y, Fuglevand Andrew J
Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0093, USA.
J Neurosci. 2005 May 4;25(18):4560-4. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0046-05.2005.
Short-term synchrony was measured for pairs of motor units located within and across muscles activated during a task that mimicked precision grip in the dominant and nondominant hands of human subjects. Surprisingly, synchrony for pairs of motor units residing in separate muscles (flexor pollicis longus, a thumb muscle, and flexor digitorum profundus, an index-finger muscle) was just as large as that for pairs of units both within the thumb muscle. Furthermore, the high level of synchrony seen across muscles in the dominant hand was absent in the nondominant hand. These results suggest that descending pathways diverge to provide extensive common input across motor nuclei involved in the precision grip and that such divergence might contribute to the preferred use of one hand over the other.
在一项模仿人类受试者优势手和非优势手精确抓握的任务中,对激活的肌肉内部和跨肌肉的运动单位对的短期同步性进行了测量。令人惊讶的是,位于不同肌肉(拇长屈肌,一种拇指肌肉,和指深屈肌,一种食指肌肉)中的运动单位对的同步性与拇指肌肉内的运动单位对的同步性一样大。此外,优势手肌肉间观察到的高度同步性在非优势手中并不存在。这些结果表明,下行通路会发散,为参与精确抓握的运动核提供广泛的共同输入,并且这种发散可能导致优先使用一只手而非另一只手。