Gervasio Sabata, Voigt Michael, Kersting Uwe G, Farina Dario, Sinkjær Thomas, Mrachacz-Kersting Natalie
Center for Sensory-Motor Interaction (SMI), Department of Health Science and Technology, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark.
Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 6;12(1):e0168557. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168557. eCollection 2017.
A constant coordination between the left and right leg is required to maintain stability during human locomotion, especially in a variable environment. The neural mechanisms underlying this interlimb coordination are not yet known. In animals, interneurons located within the spinal cord allow direct communication between the two sides without the need for the involvement of higher centers. These may also exist in humans since sensory feedback elicited by tibial nerve stimulation on one side (ipsilateral) can affect the muscles activation in the opposite side (contralateral), provoking short-latency crossed responses (SLCRs). The current study investigated whether contralateral afferent feedback contributes to the mechanism controlling the SLCR in human gastrocnemius muscle. Surface electromyogram, kinematic and kinetic data were recorded from subjects during normal walking and hybrid walking (with the legs moving in opposite directions). An inverse dynamics model was applied to estimate the gastrocnemius muscle proprioceptors' firing rate. During normal walking, a significant correlation was observed between the magnitude of SLCRs and the estimated muscle spindle secondary afferent activity (P = 0.04). Moreover, estimated spindle secondary afferent and Golgi tendon organ activity were significantly different (P ≤ 0.01) when opposite responses have been observed, that is during normal (facilitation) and hybrid walking (inhibition) conditions. Contralateral sensory feedback, specifically spindle secondary afferents, likely plays a significant role in generating the SLCR. This observation has important implications for our understanding of what future research should be focusing on to optimize locomotor recovery in patient populations.
在人类行走过程中,尤其是在多变的环境中,需要左右腿持续协调以保持稳定。这种肢体间协调的神经机制尚不清楚。在动物中,位于脊髓内的中间神经元允许两侧直接通信,而无需高级中枢的参与。人类可能也存在这些中间神经元,因为一侧(同侧)胫神经刺激引发的感觉反馈会影响对侧(对侧)的肌肉激活,引发短潜伏期交叉反应(SLCRs)。本研究调查了对侧传入反馈是否有助于控制人类腓肠肌SLCR的机制。在正常行走和混合行走(双腿向相反方向移动)过程中记录了受试者的表面肌电图、运动学和动力学数据。应用逆动力学模型来估计腓肠肌本体感受器的放电率。在正常行走过程中,观察到SLCR的大小与估计的肌梭二级传入活动之间存在显著相关性(P = 0.04)。此外,当观察到相反反应时,即在正常(易化)和混合行走(抑制)条件下,估计的梭内二级传入和高尔基腱器官活动存在显著差异(P≤0.01)。对侧感觉反馈,特别是梭内二级传入,可能在产生SLCR中起重要作用。这一观察结果对我们理解未来研究应关注哪些方面以优化患者群体的运动恢复具有重要意义。