Semmler John G, Kornatz Kurt W, Meyer François G, Enoka Roger M
Discipline of Physiology & Research Centre for Human Movement Control, School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, The University of Adelaide, 5005, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Exp Brain Res. 2006 Jul;172(4):507-18. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0367-0. Epub 2006 Feb 18.
The purpose of this study was to quantify correlated motor unit activity during isometric, shortening and lengthening contractions of a hand muscle in older adults. Thirteen old subjects (69.6+/-5.9 years, six women) lifted and lowered a light load with abduction-adduction movements of the index finger over 10 degrees using 6-s shortening and lengthening contractions of the first dorsal interosseus muscle. The task was repeated 10-20 times while activity in 23 pairs of motor units was recorded with intramuscular electrodes. The data were compared with 23 motor-unit pairs in 15 young (25.9+/-4.6 years, five women) subjects obtained using a similar protocol in a previous study. Correlated motor unit activity was quantified using time-domain (synchronization index; Common Input Strength) and frequency-domain (coherence) analyses for the same motor-unit pairs. For all contractions, there was no difference with age for the strength of motor-unit synchronization, although age-related differences were observed for synchronous peak widths (young, 17.6+/-7.4 ms; old, 13.7+/-4.9 ms) and motor-unit coherence at 6-9 Hz (z score for young, 3.0+/-1.8; old, 2.2+/-1.5). Despite increased synchrony during lengthening contractions and narrower peak widths for shortening contractions in young subjects, there was no difference in the strength of motor unit synchronization (CIS approximately 0.8 imp/s), or the width of the synchronous peak (approximately 14 ms) during the three tasks in old subjects. Furthermore, no significant differences in motor-unit coherence were observed between tasks at any frequency for old adults. These data suggest that the strategy used by the central nervous system to control isometric, shortening, and lengthening contractions varies in young adults, but not old adults. The diminished task-related adjustments of common inputs to motor neurons are a likely consequence of the neural adaptations that occur with advancing age.
本研究的目的是量化老年人手部肌肉在等长收缩、缩短收缩和延长收缩过程中相关运动单位的活动情况。13名老年受试者(69.6±5.9岁,6名女性)使用第一背侧骨间肌进行6秒的缩短收缩和延长收缩,通过食指10度的外展-内收运动来提起和放下轻负荷。该任务重复进行10至20次,同时用肌内电极记录23对运动单位的活动。将这些数据与之前一项研究中15名年轻受试者(25.9±4.6岁,5名女性)使用类似方案获得的23对运动单位的数据进行比较。使用时域(同步指数;共同输入强度)和频域(相干性)分析对相同的运动单位对量化相关运动单位活动。对于所有收缩,运动单位同步强度在年龄上没有差异,尽管在同步峰值宽度(年轻人,17.6±7.4毫秒;老年人,13.7±4.9毫秒)和6至9赫兹的运动单位相干性方面观察到了与年龄相关的差异(年轻人的z分数,3.0±1.8;老年人,2.2±1.5)。尽管年轻受试者在延长收缩期间同步性增加,缩短收缩时峰值宽度变窄,但老年受试者在三项任务中运动单位同步强度(CIS约为0.8次/秒)或同步峰值宽度(约14毫秒)没有差异。此外,在任何频率下,老年人在不同任务之间的运动单位相干性均未观察到显著差异。这些数据表明,中枢神经系统用于控制等长收缩、缩短收缩和延长收缩的策略在年轻人中有所不同,但在老年人中并非如此。随着年龄增长发生的神经适应性变化可能导致对运动神经元的共同输入与任务相关的调整减少。