Neuroscience Research Australia and University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2031 Australia.
J Physiol. 2011 Jul 1;589(Pt 13):3135-47. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2011.208447. Epub 2011 Apr 26.
Signals associated with the command the brain sends to muscles are thought to create the sensation of heaviness when we lift an object. Thus, as a muscle is weakened by fatigue or partial paralysis (neuromuscular blockade), the increase in the motor command needed to lift a weight is thought to explain the increasing subjective heaviness of the lifted object.With different fatiguing contractions we approximately halved the force output of the thumb flexor muscles, which were then used to lift an object. For two deafferented subjects the perceived heaviness of the lifted object approximately doubled, in keeping with the central-signal theory. However, for normal subjects this resulted in objects feeling the same or lighter, inconsistent with the central-signal theory but consistent with the expected effects of the conditioning contractions on the sensitivity of peripheral receptors. In separate experiments we subjected the forearm muscles to complete paralysis with a non-depolarising neuromuscular blocking agent and then allowed them to recover to approximately half-force output. This also resulted in objects feeling lighter when lifted by the semi-paralysed thumb, even though the motor command to the motoneurons must have been greater. This is readily explained by reduced lift-related reafference caused by the prolonged paralysis of muscle spindle intrafusal fibres.We conclude that peripheral signals, including a major contribution from muscle spindles, normally give rise to the sense of exerted force. In concept, however, reafference from peripheral receptors may also be considered a centrally generated signal that traverses efferent and then afferent pathways to feed perceptual centres rather than one confined entirely to the central nervous system. These results therefore challenge the distinction between central- and peripheral-based perception, and the concept that muscle spindles provide only information about limb position and movement.
当我们抬起物体时,大脑向肌肉发出的指令所产生的信号被认为会产生沉重感。因此,当肌肉因疲劳或部分瘫痪(神经肌肉阻滞)而减弱时,为了抬起重量而增加的运动指令被认为可以解释被举起的物体的主观重量不断增加。通过不同的疲劳收缩,我们大约将拇指屈肌的力量输出减半,然后用这些肌肉来举起一个物体。对于两个去传入的受试者,被举起的物体的感知重量大约增加了一倍,这与中央信号理论一致。然而,对于正常受试者,这导致物体感觉相同或更轻,与中央信号理论不一致,但与预期的 Conditioning 收缩对周围受体敏感性的影响一致。在单独的实验中,我们用非去极化神经肌肉阻滞剂使前臂肌肉完全瘫痪,然后让它们恢复到大约一半的力量输出。这也导致了半瘫痪的拇指举起的物体感觉更轻,即使向运动神经元发出的运动指令肯定更大。这很容易解释为肌肉梭内纤维的长期瘫痪导致与提升相关的再传入减少。我们得出的结论是,外周信号,包括来自肌梭的主要贡献,通常会产生所施加的力的感觉。然而,从外周受体传入的反馈也可以被认为是一种由中枢产生的信号,它穿过传出和传入通路,反馈到感知中心,而不是完全局限于中枢神经系统。因此,这些结果挑战了基于中枢和外周的感知之间的区别,以及肌肉梭提供的只是关于肢体位置和运动的信息的概念。