NeuroMuscular Research Center, Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Monash Exercise Neuroplasticity Research Unit, School of Primary and Allied Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2024 Sep;34(9):e14733. doi: 10.1111/sms.14733.
The StartReact test, increasingly popular for assessing cortico-reticular functioning, is a valid method to influence the firing of reticulospinal tract neurons noninvasively. However, there remains limited evidence on how different stimuli employed in the StartReact test impact motor output in humans. The present study tested elbow flexor responses of 33 adults (aged 26-48 years) to visual stimuli only (LED light), audio-visual (80 dB) stimuli, and startle-inducing audio-visual (120 dB) stimuli sitting with the arm supinated in an electromechanical dynamometer. Surface electromyogram (EMG) recorded muscle activity from the right biceps brachii muscle. Participants were presented with 20 stimuli for each of the three conditions in pseudorandom order with interstimulus intervals of ~8 s. Reaction times were calculated from the stimulus trigger to the initial rise in the EMG signal above 7 × SD from baseline. Rate of torque development (RTD) and EMG signals were recorded throughout and analyzed over their initial 50 ms and 100 ms time-windows. Reaction times were reduced from visual (169 ± 23) to audio-visual (140 ± 23) and further reduced to startle-inducing audio-visual stimuli (108 ± 19, p < 0.001). While RTD and EMG were consistently greatest following startle-inducing stimuli (p < 0.001), they were also enhanced following all audio-visual stimuli over 100 ms (p < 0.05). It appears that startle-inducing audio-visual stimuli result in shorter reaction times, increased RTD, and enhanced muscle activity within the initial 50 ms, likely from subcortical upregulation. However, the 100 ms time-window suggests cortical upregulation following all audio-visual stimuli considering the longer transmission times.
StartReact 测试越来越流行,用于评估皮质网状功能,是一种无创性影响网状脊髓束神经元放电的有效方法。然而,关于 StartReact 测试中使用的不同刺激如何影响人类运动输出的证据仍然有限。本研究测试了 33 名成年人(年龄 26-48 岁)在坐姿状态下对视觉刺激(LED 灯)、视听刺激(80 分贝)和惊吓诱导的视听刺激(120 分贝)的肘屈肌反应,手臂处于旋后位,使用机电动态测力仪。表面肌电图(EMG)记录右肱二头肌的肌肉活动。参与者以伪随机顺序接受三种条件下的 20 次刺激,刺激间隔约为 8 秒。反应时间从刺激触发到肌电图信号初始上升超过基线 7×SD 计算。在整个过程中记录了扭矩发展速率(RTD)和肌电图信号,并在初始 50ms 和 100ms 时间窗口内进行了分析。反应时间从视觉刺激(169±23)减少到视听刺激(140±23),进一步减少到惊吓诱导的视听刺激(108±19,p<0.001)。虽然 RTD 和 EMG 在惊吓诱导刺激后始终最大(p<0.001),但在 100ms 后所有视听刺激也增强(p<0.05)。似乎惊吓诱导的视听刺激导致反应时间更短,RTD 增加,在初始 50ms 内肌肉活动增强,可能来自皮质下的上调。然而,考虑到较长的传输时间,100ms 时间窗口表明所有视听刺激后皮质的上调。