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Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences

Arterial pulsations are known to modulate muscle spindle firing; however, the physiological significance of such synchronised modulation has not been investigated. Unitary recordings were made from 75 human muscle spindle afferents innervating the pretibial muscles. The modulation of muscle spindle...

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Autores principales: Birznieks, Ingvars, Boonstra, Tjeerd W., Macefield, Vaughan G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3328488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22529975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035091
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author Birznieks, Ingvars
Boonstra, Tjeerd W.
Macefield, Vaughan G.
author_facet Birznieks, Ingvars
Boonstra, Tjeerd W.
Macefield, Vaughan G.
author_sort Birznieks, Ingvars
collection PubMed
description Arterial pulsations are known to modulate muscle spindle firing; however, the physiological significance of such synchronised modulation has not been investigated. Unitary recordings were made from 75 human muscle spindle afferents innervating the pretibial muscles. The modulation of muscle spindle discharge by arterial pulsations was evaluated by R-wave triggered averaging and power spectral analysis. We describe various effects arterial pulsations may have on muscle spindle afferent discharge. Afferents could be “driven” by arterial pulsations, e.g., showing no other spontaneous activity than spikes generated with cardiac rhythmicity. Among afferents showing ongoing discharge that was not primarily related to cardiac rhythmicity we illustrate several mechanisms by which individual spikes may become phase-locked. However, in the majority of afferents the discharge rate was modulated by the pulse wave without spikes being phase locked. Then we assessed whether these influences changed in two physiological conditions in which a sustained increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity was observed without activation of fusimotor neurones: a maximal inspiratory breath-hold, which causes a fall in systolic pressure, and acute muscle pain, which causes an increase in systolic pressure. The majority of primary muscle spindle afferents displayed pulse-wave modulation, but neither apnoea nor pain had any significant effect on the strength of this modulation, suggesting that the physiological noise injected by the arterial pulsations is robust and relatively insensitive to fluctuations in blood pressure. Within the afferent population there was a similar number of muscle spindles that were inhibited and that were excited by the arterial pulse wave, indicating that after signal integration at the population level, arterial pulsations of opposite polarity would cancel each other out. We speculate that with close-to-threshold stimuli the arterial pulsations may serve as an endogenous noise source that may synchronise the sporadic discharge within the afferent population and thus facilitate the detection of weak stimuli.
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spelling pubmed-33284882012-04-23 Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences Birznieks, Ingvars Boonstra, Tjeerd W. Macefield, Vaughan G. PLoS One Research Article Arterial pulsations are known to modulate muscle spindle firing; however, the physiological significance of such synchronised modulation has not been investigated. Unitary recordings were made from 75 human muscle spindle afferents innervating the pretibial muscles. The modulation of muscle spindle discharge by arterial pulsations was evaluated by R-wave triggered averaging and power spectral analysis. We describe various effects arterial pulsations may have on muscle spindle afferent discharge. Afferents could be “driven” by arterial pulsations, e.g., showing no other spontaneous activity than spikes generated with cardiac rhythmicity. Among afferents showing ongoing discharge that was not primarily related to cardiac rhythmicity we illustrate several mechanisms by which individual spikes may become phase-locked. However, in the majority of afferents the discharge rate was modulated by the pulse wave without spikes being phase locked. Then we assessed whether these influences changed in two physiological conditions in which a sustained increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity was observed without activation of fusimotor neurones: a maximal inspiratory breath-hold, which causes a fall in systolic pressure, and acute muscle pain, which causes an increase in systolic pressure. The majority of primary muscle spindle afferents displayed pulse-wave modulation, but neither apnoea nor pain had any significant effect on the strength of this modulation, suggesting that the physiological noise injected by the arterial pulsations is robust and relatively insensitive to fluctuations in blood pressure. Within the afferent population there was a similar number of muscle spindles that were inhibited and that were excited by the arterial pulse wave, indicating that after signal integration at the population level, arterial pulsations of opposite polarity would cancel each other out. We speculate that with close-to-threshold stimuli the arterial pulsations may serve as an endogenous noise source that may synchronise the sporadic discharge within the afferent population and thus facilitate the detection of weak stimuli. Public Library of Science 2012-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3328488/ /pubmed/22529975 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035091 Text en Birznieks et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Birznieks, Ingvars
Boonstra, Tjeerd W.
Macefield, Vaughan G.
Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title_full Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title_fullStr Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title_full_unstemmed Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title_short Modulation of Human Muscle Spindle Discharge by Arterial Pulsations - Functional Effects and Consequences
title_sort modulation of human muscle spindle discharge by arterial pulsations - functional effects and consequences
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3328488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22529975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035091
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