Eilfort Antonia Maria, Filli Linard
Spinal Cord Injury Center, Balgrist University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland.
Neuroscience Center Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2025 May 21;19:1610211. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2025.1610211. eCollection 2025.
Movement initiation relies on descending motor drive conveying motor commands from the brain to spinal motor circuits, leading to the activation of specific muscles to produce the intended movement. While the role of descending motor drive on the onset of muscle activation has been extensively examined, its impact on motor unit recruitment, muscle fiber activation, and the electromechanical delay (EMD) remain poorly understood. This study aimed to elucidate the role of the reticulospinal (RS) system in shaping muscle activation patterns, movement initiation, and the EMD by employing the StartReact paradigm.
The StartReact paradigm was implemented in 29 healthy participants performing 14 single-joint motor tasks including both upper and lower extremities. Muscle activity was recorded using surface electromyography (EMG), while movement patterns were acquired via motion capture technology. Muscle activation and movement patterns were analyzed in both temporal and amplitude domains to characterize differences between movements cued by either loud (LAS: 120 dB) or moderate acoustic stimuli (MAS: 82 dB). EMD was defined as the time interval between EMG onset and movement initiation.
Our results revealed faster and more pronounced muscle activation and movement performance in response to LAS compared to MAS. Notably, EMD was significantly reduced in LAS trials, suggesting that enhanced RS drive facilitates more rapid electromechanical coupling.
These findings suggest that RS drive not only shortens muscular reaction times - characteristic of the StartReact effect - but also modulates muscle activation and movement dynamics in a way that accelerates the transition from muscle activation to movement. The observed reduction in EMD likely reflects changes in motor unit recruitment and muscle fiber activation, highlighting an additional mechanism through which the RS system enables rapid, explosive motor responses. This study provides novel insights into how descending motor drive modulates muscle activation and movement execution, and emphasizes the relevance of the RS system in supporting rapid, high-force movements essential for protective reflexes and athletic performances.
运动起始依赖于下行运动驱动,即将运动指令从大脑传递至脊髓运动回路,从而激活特定肌肉以产生预期运动。虽然下行运动驱动对肌肉激活起始的作用已得到广泛研究,但其对运动单位募集、肌纤维激活以及机电延迟(EMD)的影响仍知之甚少。本研究旨在通过采用起始反应范式来阐明网状脊髓(RS)系统在塑造肌肉激活模式、运动起始和机电延迟方面的作用。
在29名健康参与者中实施起始反应范式,他们执行14项单关节运动任务,包括上肢和下肢运动。使用表面肌电图(EMG)记录肌肉活动,同时通过运动捕捉技术获取运动模式。在时间和幅度域分析肌肉激活和运动模式,以表征由大声(LAS:120分贝)或中等强度声刺激(MAS:82分贝)提示的运动之间的差异。EMD定义为肌电图起始与运动起始之间的时间间隔。
我们的结果显示,与MAS相比,LAS引发的肌肉激活和运动表现更快且更显著。值得注意的是,LAS试验中的EMD显著缩短,表明增强的RS驱动促进了更快的机电耦合。
这些发现表明,RS驱动不仅缩短了肌肉反应时间——这是起始反应效应的特征——而且以加速从肌肉激活到运动转变的方式调节肌肉激活和运动动力学。观察到的EMD缩短可能反映了运动单位募集和肌纤维激活的变化,突出了RS系统实现快速、爆发性运动反应的另一种机制。本研究为下行运动驱动如何调节肌肉激活和运动执行提供了新的见解,并强调了RS系统在支持对保护性反射和运动表现至关重要的快速、高强度运动方面的相关性。