Literature DB >> 21960662

Plane of vertebral movement eliciting muscle lengthening history in the low back influences the decrease in muscle spindle responsiveness of the cat.

Weiqing Ge1, Dong-Yuan Cao, Cynthia R Long, Joel G Pickar.   

Abstract

Proprioceptive feedback is thought to play a significant role in controlling both lumbopelvic and intervertebral orientations. In the lumbar spine, a vertebra's positional history along the dorsal-ventral axis has been shown to alter the position, movement, and velocity sensitivity of muscle spindles in the multifidus and longissimus muscles. These effects appear due to muscle history. Because spinal motion segments have up to 6 degrees of freedom for movement, we were interested in whether the axis along which the history is applied differentially affects paraspinal muscle spindles. We tested the null hypothesis that the loading axis, which creates a vertebra's positional history, has no effect on a lumbar muscle spindle's subsequent response to vertebral position or movement. Identical displacements were applied along three orthogonal axes directly at the L(6) spinous process using a feedback motor system under displacement control. Single-unit nerve activity was recorded from 60 muscle spindle afferents in teased filaments from L(6) dorsal rootlets innervating intact longissimus or multifidus muscles of deeply anesthetized cats. Muscle lengthening histories along the caudal-cranial and dorsal-ventral axis, compared with the left-right axis, produced significantly greater reductions in spindle responses to vertebral position and movement. The spinal anatomy suggested that the effect of a lengthening history is greatest when that history had occurred along an axis lying within the anatomical plane of the facet joint. Speculation is made that the interaction between normal spinal mechanics and the inherent thixotropic property of muscle spindles poses a challenge for feedback and feedforward motor control of the lumbar spine.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21960662      PMCID: PMC3233890          DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00059.2011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  40 in total

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  7 in total

1.  The decreased responsiveness of lumbar muscle spindles to a prior history of spinal muscle lengthening is graded with the magnitude of change in vertebral position.

Authors:  Weiqing Ge; Joel G Pickar
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Authors:  Dong-Yuan Cao; Joel G Pickar
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3.  Neural responses to the mechanical parameters of a high-velocity, low-amplitude spinal manipulation: effect of preload parameters.

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Review 4.  Patient-Related Risk Factors for the Development of Lumbar Spine Adjacent Segment Pathology.

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Journal:  Orthop Rev (Pavia)       Date:  2021-06-24

5.  Using vertebral movement and intact paraspinal muscles to determine the distribution of intrafusal fiber innervation of muscle spindle afferents in the anesthetized cat.

Authors:  William R Reed; Dong-Yuan Cao; Weiqing Ge; Joel G Pickar
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2012-12-11       Impact factor: 1.972

6.  Incidence and risk factors of adjacent segment disease following posterior decompression and instrumented fusion for degenerative lumbar disorders.

Authors:  Hui Wang; Lei Ma; Dalong Yang; Tao Wang; Sen Liu; Sidong Yang; Wenyuan Ding
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 1.889

7.  A quasi-experimental study on the effects of instrument assisted soft tissue mobilization on mechanosensitive neurons.

Authors:  Weiqing Ge; Emily Roth; Alyssa Sansone
Journal:  J Phys Ther Sci       Date:  2017-04-20
  7 in total

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