Forssberg H, Hirschfeld H
Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Exp Brain Res. 1994;97(3):515-27. doi: 10.1007/BF00241545.
There are several controversies concerning the organization and induction of postural adjustments in standing humans. Some investigators suggest the responses are triggered by somatosensory inputs (especially from the ankle in standing subjects), while others emphasize the vestibular input induced by head acceleration. We examined postural responses in sitting subjects in order to describe the muscle activation pattern during various perturbations and to test whether somatosensory or vestibular stimulation elicited the responses. The kinematics and EMG patterns in response to perturbations caused by movements of the support surface were studied in adults. The postural muscle activation following a backward sway was mainly the same, whether it was elicited by a forward translation or a legs-up rotation. This is remarkable, since, except for pelvis rotation, the movements of all body segments including the head differed in the two conditions. Furthermore, a second experiment showed that the direction of the initial head movement could be reversed with retainment of the same postural muscle activation pattern. The results suggest that somatosensory signals derived from the backward rotation of the pelvis, and not vestibular information from the head, trigger postural responses during sitting. There was a slight but consistent difference in the muscle activation pattern, whether the backward sway was elicited by a forward translation or legs-up rotation. The difference seemed to reflect the sensory information from head and other body parts (except the pelvis). This finding allowed us to speculate in a central pattern generator for postural adjustments containing two levels. At the first level, a simple format of the muscle activation would be generated; at the second level, the centrally generated pattern could be shaped and timed by interaction from the entire somatosensory, vestibular, and visual input.
关于站立人体姿势调整的组织和诱发存在若干争议。一些研究者认为这些反应是由体感输入触发的(特别是站立受试者脚踝的体感输入),而另一些人则强调头部加速度引起的前庭输入。我们研究了坐姿受试者的姿势反应,以描述各种扰动期间的肌肉激活模式,并测试体感或前庭刺激是否引发了这些反应。在成年人中研究了对支撑面运动引起的扰动的运动学和肌电图模式。向后摆动后姿势肌肉的激活基本相同,无论它是由向前平移还是抬腿旋转引起的。这很值得注意,因为除了骨盆旋转外,包括头部在内的所有身体节段在这两种情况下的运动都不同。此外,第二个实验表明,初始头部运动的方向可以反转,同时保持相同的姿势肌肉激活模式。结果表明,坐姿时触发姿势反应的是来自骨盆向后旋转的体感信号,而非来自头部的前庭信息。无论向后摆动是由向前平移还是抬腿旋转引起的,肌肉激活模式都存在轻微但一致的差异。这种差异似乎反映了来自头部和身体其他部位(除骨盆外)的感觉信息。这一发现使我们能够推测存在一个包含两个层次的姿势调整中枢模式发生器。在第一个层次,会产生一种简单的肌肉激活形式;在第二个层次,中枢产生的模式可以通过来自整个体感、前庭和视觉输入的相互作用来塑造和定时。