Iscoe S
Department of Physiology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Prog Neurobiol. 1998 Nov;56(4):433-506. doi: 10.1016/s0301-0082(98)00046-x.
Abdominal muscles serve many roles; in addition to breathing, especially at higher levels of chemical drive or at increased end-expiratory lung volumes, they are responsible for, or contribute to, such protective reflexes as cough, sneeze, and vomiting, generate the high intra-abdominal pressures necessary for defecation and parturition, are active during postural adjustments, and play an essential role in vocalization in many species. Despite this widespread involvement, however, their control has, with rare exceptions, received little attention for two major reasons. First, in most anesthetized or decerebrate preparations, they are relatively inactive at rest, in part because the position of the preparation (supine or prone with abdomen supported), reduces lung volume and, therefore, their activity. Second, unlike phrenic motoneurons innervating the diaphragm, identification of motoneurons to a particular abdominal muscle is difficult. At the lumbar level, a given motoneuron may innervate any one of the four abdominal muscles; at the thoracic level, they are also intermixed with those innervating the intercostals. The two internal muscles, the internal oblique and the transverse abdominis, respond more to increases in chemical or volume-related drive than the two external muscles, the rectus abdominis and external oblique; the basis for this differential sensitivity is unknown. Segmental reflexes at the thoracic and lumbar levels are sufficient to activate abdominal motoneurons in the absence of descending drive but the basis for these reflex effects is also unknown. Neuroanatomical experiments demonstrate many more inputs to, and outputs from, the nucleus retroambigualis, the brainstem region in which the premotor neurons are located, than can be accounted for by their respiratory role alone. These other connections likely subserve activities other than respiration. Studies of the multifunctional roles of the abdominal muscles, on the basis of recent work, hold considerable promise for improving our understanding of their control.
腹肌具有多种功能;除了呼吸,尤其是在化学驱动水平较高或呼气末肺容积增加时,它们还负责或参与咳嗽、打喷嚏和呕吐等保护性反射,产生排便和分娩所需的高腹内压,在姿势调整过程中发挥作用,并且在许多物种的发声中起着至关重要的作用。然而,尽管腹肌有如此广泛的功能,但除了极少数例外,其控制很少受到关注,主要有两个原因。首先,在大多数麻醉或去大脑的实验准备中,它们在静息时相对不活跃,部分原因是实验准备的位置(仰卧或俯卧且腹部得到支撑)会减少肺容积,从而降低它们的活动。其次,与支配膈肌的膈运动神经元不同,识别支配特定腹肌的运动神经元很困难。在腰椎水平,一个给定的运动神经元可能支配四块腹肌中的任何一块;在胸椎水平,它们还与支配肋间肌的运动神经元相互交织。两块内部肌肉,即腹内斜肌和腹横肌,对化学或容积相关驱动增加的反应比两块外部肌肉,即腹直肌和腹外斜肌更强烈;这种差异敏感性的基础尚不清楚。在没有下行驱动的情况下,胸段和腰段的节段性反射足以激活腹部运动神经元,但这些反射效应的基础也不清楚。神经解剖学实验表明,疑核(前运动神经元所在的脑干区域)的输入和输出远远多于仅由其呼吸作用所能解释的数量。这些其他连接可能服务于呼吸以外的活动。基于最近的研究工作,对腹肌多功能作用的研究有望极大地增进我们对其控制的理解。