Ricotta Joseph M, Nardon Mauro, De Sayan D, Jiang Jinrui, Graziani William, Latash Mark L
Department of Kinesiology, Rec.Hall-20, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802, USA.
Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, 17033, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2023 May;241(5):1367-1379. doi: 10.1007/s00221-023-06606-9. Epub 2023 Apr 5.
The concept of synergies has been used to address the grouping of motor elements contributing to a task with the covariation of these elements reflecting task stability. This concept has recently been extended to groups of motor units with parallel scaling of the firing frequencies with possible contributions of intermittent recruitment (MU-modes) in compartmentalized flexor and extensor muscles of the forearm stabilizing force magnitude in finger pressing tasks. Here, we directly test for the presence and behavior of MU-modes in the tibialis anterior, a non-compartmentalized muscle. Ten participants performed an isometric cyclical dorsiflexion force production task at 1 Hz between 20 and 40% of maximal voluntary contraction and electromyographic (EMG) data were collected from two high-density wireless sensors placed on the skin over the right tibialis anterior. EMG data were decomposed into individual motor unit frequencies and resolved into sets of MU-modes. Inter-cycle analysis of MU-mode magnitudes within the framework of the uncontrolled manifold (UCM) hypothesis was used to quantify force-stabilizing synergies. Two or three MU-modes were identified in all participants and trials accounting, on average, for 69% of variance and were robust to cross-validation measurements. Strong dorsiflexion force-stabilizing synergies in the space of MU-modes were present in all participants and for both electrode locations as reflected in variance within the UCM (median 954, IQR 511-1924) exceeding variance orthogonal to the UCM (median 5.82, IQR 2.9-17.4) by two orders of magnitude. In contrast, MU-mode-stabilizing synergies in the space of motor unit frequencies were not present. This study offers strong evidence for the existence of synergic control mechanisms at the level of motor units independent of muscle compartmentalization, likely organized within spinal cord circuitry.
协同作用的概念已被用于处理有助于完成一项任务的运动元素分组问题,这些元素的协同变化反映了任务的稳定性。最近,这一概念已扩展到运动单位组,在前臂的分隔屈肌和伸肌中,随着间歇性募集(运动单位模式)的可能作用,放电频率呈平行缩放,以稳定手指按压任务中的力大小。在此,我们直接测试了胫骨前肌(一种非分隔肌)中运动单位模式的存在和行为。10名参与者在最大自主收缩的20%至40%之间以1Hz的频率进行等长周期性背屈力产生任务,并从放置在右胫骨前肌皮肤上方的两个高密度无线传感器收集肌电图(EMG)数据。EMG数据被分解为单个运动单位频率,并解析为运动单位模式集。在非受控流形(UCM)假设框架内对运动单位模式大小进行周期间分析,以量化力稳定协同作用。在所有参与者和试验中均识别出两到三种运动单位模式,平均占方差的69%,并且对交叉验证测量具有稳健性。正如UCM内的方差所反映的那样,所有参与者以及两个电极位置均存在运动单位模式空间中的强大背屈力稳定协同作用(中位数954,四分位距511 - 1924),比与UCM正交的方差(中位数5.82,四分位距2.9 - 17.4)高出两个数量级。相比之下,运动单位频率空间中的运动单位模式稳定协同作用并不存在。这项研究为运动单位水平上存在独立于肌肉分隔的协同控制机制提供了有力证据,这种机制可能在脊髓回路中组织起来。