Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man

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Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man. / Nielsen, Jens Bo; Nagaoka, M; Kagamihara, Y; Kakuda, N; Tanaka, R.

In: Neuroscience Letters, Vol. 170, No. 2, 1994, p. 277-280.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, JB, Nagaoka, M, Kagamihara, Y, Kakuda, N & Tanaka, R 1994, 'Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man', Neuroscience Letters, vol. 170, no. 2, pp. 277-280. https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9

APA

Nielsen, J. B., Nagaoka, M., Kagamihara, Y., Kakuda, N., & Tanaka, R. (1994). Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man. Neuroscience Letters, 170(2), 277-280. https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9

Vancouver

Nielsen JB, Nagaoka M, Kagamihara Y, Kakuda N, Tanaka R. Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man. Neuroscience Letters. 1994;170(2):277-280. https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9

Author

Nielsen, Jens Bo ; Nagaoka, M ; Kagamihara, Y ; Kakuda, N ; Tanaka, R. / Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man. In: Neuroscience Letters. 1994 ; Vol. 170, No. 2. pp. 277-280.

Bibtex

@article{6d1d4ec0d62a11dcbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man",
abstract = "The discharge of 38 tibialis anterior (TA) muscle spindle endings was recorded at rest and during isometric voluntary contraction of the ankle joint in eight healthy human subjects. With the ankle joint in 110° plantarflexion, 24 endings (61%) were tonically active in the resting subject. During weak voluntary dorsiflexion, seven additional endings were activated, so that a total of 31 endings were active (82%). 24 of these were either newly recruited or discharged at a faster rate than at rest (average discharge rate 6.6 Hz at rest, 9.7 Hz during contraction). At matched levels of TA EMG, one ending was newly recruited and 10 were more active during co-contraction of dorsi and plantar flexors than during isolated dorsiflexion. 26 endings were equally active during the two tasks and one ending decreased its firing rate with co-contraction. Four of the 11 endings, which had a higher discharge rate during co-contraction than during dorsiflexion, discharged faster during plantarflexion than at rest although slower than during co-contraction. Plantarflexion had no effect on the discharge of three endings. The remaining four endings were not investigated during plantarflexion. It is suggested that the increased discharge rate of muscle endings during co-contraction is caused either by small changes in the length of the TA muscle or by a disproportionately high fusimotor drive during co-contraction.",
author = "Nielsen, {Jens Bo} and M Nagaoka and Y Kagamihara and N Kakuda and R Tanaka",
year = "1994",
doi = "10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9",
language = "English",
volume = "170",
pages = "277--280",
journal = "Neuroscience letters. Supplement",
issn = "0167-6253",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Discharge of muscle afferents during voluntary co-contraction of antagonistic ankle muscles in man

AU - Nielsen, Jens Bo

AU - Nagaoka, M

AU - Kagamihara, Y

AU - Kakuda, N

AU - Tanaka, R

PY - 1994

Y1 - 1994

N2 - The discharge of 38 tibialis anterior (TA) muscle spindle endings was recorded at rest and during isometric voluntary contraction of the ankle joint in eight healthy human subjects. With the ankle joint in 110° plantarflexion, 24 endings (61%) were tonically active in the resting subject. During weak voluntary dorsiflexion, seven additional endings were activated, so that a total of 31 endings were active (82%). 24 of these were either newly recruited or discharged at a faster rate than at rest (average discharge rate 6.6 Hz at rest, 9.7 Hz during contraction). At matched levels of TA EMG, one ending was newly recruited and 10 were more active during co-contraction of dorsi and plantar flexors than during isolated dorsiflexion. 26 endings were equally active during the two tasks and one ending decreased its firing rate with co-contraction. Four of the 11 endings, which had a higher discharge rate during co-contraction than during dorsiflexion, discharged faster during plantarflexion than at rest although slower than during co-contraction. Plantarflexion had no effect on the discharge of three endings. The remaining four endings were not investigated during plantarflexion. It is suggested that the increased discharge rate of muscle endings during co-contraction is caused either by small changes in the length of the TA muscle or by a disproportionately high fusimotor drive during co-contraction.

AB - The discharge of 38 tibialis anterior (TA) muscle spindle endings was recorded at rest and during isometric voluntary contraction of the ankle joint in eight healthy human subjects. With the ankle joint in 110° plantarflexion, 24 endings (61%) were tonically active in the resting subject. During weak voluntary dorsiflexion, seven additional endings were activated, so that a total of 31 endings were active (82%). 24 of these were either newly recruited or discharged at a faster rate than at rest (average discharge rate 6.6 Hz at rest, 9.7 Hz during contraction). At matched levels of TA EMG, one ending was newly recruited and 10 were more active during co-contraction of dorsi and plantar flexors than during isolated dorsiflexion. 26 endings were equally active during the two tasks and one ending decreased its firing rate with co-contraction. Four of the 11 endings, which had a higher discharge rate during co-contraction than during dorsiflexion, discharged faster during plantarflexion than at rest although slower than during co-contraction. Plantarflexion had no effect on the discharge of three endings. The remaining four endings were not investigated during plantarflexion. It is suggested that the increased discharge rate of muscle endings during co-contraction is caused either by small changes in the length of the TA muscle or by a disproportionately high fusimotor drive during co-contraction.

U2 - 10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9

DO - 10.1016/0304-3940(94)90337-9

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 8058200

VL - 170

SP - 277

EP - 280

JO - Neuroscience letters. Supplement

JF - Neuroscience letters. Supplement

SN - 0167-6253

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 2644932