Dakin Christopher J, Son Gregory M Lee, Inglis J Timothy, Blouin Jean-Sébastien
School of Human Kinetics, University of British-Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T1Z1.
J Physiol. 2007 Sep 15;583(Pt 3):1117-27. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.133264. Epub 2007 Jul 19.
Stochastic vestibular stimulation (SVS) can be used to study the postural responses to unpredictable vestibular perturbations. The present study seeks to determine if stochastic vestibular stimulation elicits lower limb muscular responses and to estimate the frequency characteristics of these vestibulo-motor responses in humans. Fourteen healthy subjects were exposed to unpredictable galvanic currents applied on their mastoid processes while quietly standing (+/-3 mA, 0-50 Hz). The current amplitude and stimulation configuration as well as the subject's head position relative to their feet were manipulated in order to determine that: (1) the muscle responses evoked by stochastic currents are dependent on the amplitude of the current, (2) the muscle responses evoked by stochastic currents are specific to the percutaneous stimulation of vestibular afferents and (3) the lower limb muscle responses exhibit polarity changes with different head positions as previously described for square-wave galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) pulses. Our results revealed significant coherence (between 0 and 20 Hz) and cumulant density functions (peak responses at 65 and 103 ms) between SVS and the lower limbs' postural muscle activity. The polarity of the cumulant density functions corresponded to that of the reflexes elicited by square-wave GVS pulses. The SVS-muscle activity coherence and time cumulant functions were modulated by current amplitude, electrode position and head orientation with respect to the subject's feet. These findings strongly support the vestibular origin of the lower limb muscles evoked by SVS. In addition, specific frequency bandwidths in the stochastic vestibular signal contributed to the early (12-20 Hz) and late components (2-10 Hz) of the SVS-evoked muscular responses. These frequency-dependent SVS-evoked muscle responses support the view that the biphasic muscle response is conveyed by two distinct physiological processes.
随机前庭刺激(SVS)可用于研究对不可预测的前庭扰动的姿势反应。本研究旨在确定随机前庭刺激是否会引发下肢肌肉反应,并估计这些前庭运动反应在人类中的频率特征。14名健康受试者在安静站立时(±3 mA,0 - 50 Hz),其乳突部位受到不可预测的电流刺激。对电流幅度、刺激配置以及受试者头部相对于脚部的位置进行了操控,以确定:(1)随机电流诱发的肌肉反应取决于电流幅度;(2)随机电流诱发的肌肉反应是前庭传入神经经皮刺激所特有的;(3)下肢肌肉反应如先前针对方波电刺激前庭刺激(GVS)脉冲所描述的那样,会随着不同头部位置呈现极性变化。我们的结果显示,SVS与下肢姿势肌肉活动之间存在显著的相干性(0至20 Hz之间)和累积密度函数(峰值反应出现在65和103毫秒)。累积密度函数的极性与方波GVS脉冲诱发的反射极性相对应。SVS - 肌肉活动相干性和时间累积函数受到电流幅度、电极位置以及头部相对于受试者脚部的方向的调制。这些发现有力地支持了SVS诱发的下肢肌肉起源于前庭。此外,随机前庭信号中的特定频率带宽促成了SVS诱发的肌肉反应的早期成分(12 - 20 Hz)和晚期成分(2 - 10 Hz)。这些频率依赖性的SVS诱发的肌肉反应支持了双相肌肉反应由两个不同生理过程传递的观点。