Grill S E, Rymer W Z
J Neurophysiol. 1987 Feb;57(2):574-95. doi: 10.1152/jn.1987.57.2.574.
The discharge of spindle afferents from medial gastrocnemius and soleus muscles was recorded in the decerebrated cat preparation, under isometric conditions and during ramp and hold stretches. Motor output was varied systematically by manual stimulation of the contralateral hindlimb. Twenty-six of 34 afferents showed response patterns consistent with enhancement of dynamic and/or static fusimotor input with increasing muscle force. To establish whether force-related fusimotor effects were mediated at least partly by beta-input, beta-innervation to these same spindles was sought, using a ventral root stimulation protocol. Twenty-three of the 34 afferents were shown to receive beta-innervation, which was most often static in type. For two measures of fusimotor action, the slope of the afferent dynamic rate-length relation and the discharge rate measured during the last portion of ramp stretch, significant increases in the measure, which paralleled increases in muscle force, made it statistically more likely that the afferent received beta-innervation. Our measures did not successfully predict the type of beta-input (beta-static or beta-dynamic). Procaine block of gamma-fibers produced substantial reductions in fusimotor effect in seven spindle afferents (although modest residual fusimotor effects were detectable for 3/7 afferents). The severity of these reductions indicates that beta-action probably requires concurrent gamma-input to the spindle in order to be effective. In support of this possibility, the fusimotor effects of electrical stimulation of single beta-fibers were greatly reduced for five out of six afferents during procaine block of gamma-fibers, compared with the beta-effects recorded when modest levels of spontaneous gamma-activity were present. We conclude that beta-innervation to muscle spindles of triceps surae is common and that this innervation exerts significant fusimotor effects. It appears likely that beta-motoneurons are able to produce both static and dynamic effects above extrafusal threshold, but that the actions require on-going gamma-activity in order to be effective.
在去大脑猫的标本上,于等长条件下以及在斜坡和持续拉伸过程中,记录了来自腓肠肌内侧头和比目鱼肌的梭内传入纤维的放电情况。通过手动刺激对侧后肢,系统地改变运动输出。34根传入纤维中有26根的反应模式与随着肌肉力量增加动态和/或静态肌梭运动输入增强相一致。为了确定与力量相关的肌梭运动效应是否至少部分由β传入介导,使用腹根刺激方案寻找这些相同肌梭的β神经支配。34根传入纤维中有23根显示接受β神经支配,其类型大多为静态。对于肌梭运动作用的两项测量指标,即传入动态速率-长度关系的斜率以及斜坡拉伸最后部分测得的放电率,这些指标的显著增加与肌肉力量的增加平行,这在统计学上使传入纤维接受β神经支配的可能性更大。我们的测量未能成功预测β传入的类型(β静态或β动态)。γ纤维的普鲁卡因阻断在7根肌梭传入纤维中使肌梭运动效应大幅降低(尽管3/7根传入纤维可检测到适度的残余肌梭运动效应)。这些降低的严重程度表明,β作用可能需要同时有γ传入至肌梭才能有效。支持这一可能性的是,与存在适度自发γ活动时记录的β效应相比,在γ纤维的普鲁卡因阻断期间,6根传入纤维中有5根单根β纤维电刺激的肌梭运动效应大幅降低。我们得出结论,腓肠肌肌梭的β神经支配很常见,且这种神经支配发挥着显著的肌梭运动效应。β运动神经元似乎能够在肌外肌阈值以上产生静态和动态效应,但这些作用需要持续的γ活动才能有效。