Department of Neurology, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Center for Neuroscience, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
J Neurophysiol. 2010 Nov;104(5):2704-12. doi: 10.1152/jn.01080.2009. Epub 2010 Sep 1.
Unexpected support-surface movements delivered during stance elicit "first trial" postural reactions, which are larger and cause greater instability compared with habituated responses. The nature of this first trial reaction remains unknown. We hypothesized that first trial postural reactions consist of a generalized startle reaction, with a similar muscle synergy as the acoustic startle response, combined with an automatic postural reaction. Therefore we compared acoustic startle responses to first trial postural reactions. Eight healthy subjects stood on a support surface that unexpectedly rotated backwards 10 times, followed by 10 startling acoustic stimuli, or vice versa. Outcome measures included full body kinematics and surface EMG from muscles involved in startle reactions or postural control. Postural perturbations and startling acoustic stimuli both elicited a clear first trial reaction, as reflected by larger kinematic and EMG responses. The ensuing habituation rate to repeated identical stimuli was comparable for neck and trunk muscles in both conditions. Onset latencies in neck muscles occurred significantly later for first trial perturbations compared with startle responses, but earlier in trunk muscles. Our results show that platform tilting initially induces reactions larger than needed to maintain equilibrium. For neck and trunk muscles, these first trial postural reactions resembled acoustic startle reflexes. First trial postural reactions may be triggered by interaction of afferent volleys formed by somatosensory and vestibular inputs. Acoustic startle reactions may also be partially triggered by vestibular inputs. Similar muscle activation driven by vestibular inputs may be the common element of first trial postural responses and acoustic startle reactions.
在站立期间,意想不到的支撑面运动引发了“初次试验”姿势反应,与习惯化反应相比,这些反应更大,导致更大的不稳定性。这种初次试验反应的性质尚不清楚。我们假设初次试验姿势反应包括一种广义的惊吓反应,其肌肉协同作用与声学惊吓反应相似,同时伴随着一种自动姿势反应。因此,我们比较了声学惊吓反应和初次试验姿势反应。8 名健康受试者站在一个支撑面上,该支撑面意外向后旋转 10 次,随后是 10 次令人惊讶的声学刺激,或者反之亦然。结果测量包括参与惊吓反应或姿势控制的全身运动学和表面肌电图。姿势扰动和令人惊讶的声学刺激都引发了明显的初次试验反应,表现为更大的运动学和肌电图反应。在两种情况下,颈部和躯干肌肉对重复相同刺激的适应率相当。与惊吓反应相比,颈部肌肉的初次试验扰动的起始潜伏期明显延迟,但在躯干肌肉中则更早。我们的结果表明,平台倾斜最初会引发大于维持平衡所需的反应。对于颈部和躯干肌肉,这些初次试验姿势反应类似于声学惊吓反射。初次试验姿势反应可能是由躯体感觉和前庭输入形成的传入冲动相互作用触发的。声学惊吓反应也可能部分由前庭输入触发。由前庭输入驱动的类似肌肉激活可能是初次试验姿势反应和声学惊吓反应的共同要素。