| Literature DB >> 26573576 |
Shinya Suzuki1,2, Tsuyoshi Nakajima3, Genki Futatsubashi4,5, Rinaldo A Mezzarane6,7,8, Hiroyuki Ohtsuka9, Yukari Ohki3, Tomoyoshi Komiyama10,11.
Abstract
We previously demonstrated that non-noxious electrical stimulation of the cutaneous nerve innervating the contralateral foot modified the excitability of the Hoffmann (H-) reflex in the soleus muscle (SOL) in a task-dependent manner during standing and walking in humans. To date, however, it remains unclear how the crossed conditioning effect on the SOL H-reflex from the contralateral foot is modified during the various phases of walking. We sought to answer this question in the present study. The SOL H-reflex was evoked in healthy volunteers by an electrical test stimulation (TS) of the right (ipsilateral) posterior tibial nerve at five different phases during treadmill walking (4 km/h). A non-noxious electrical stimulation was delivered to the superficial peroneal nerve of the left (contralateral) ankle ~100 ms before the TS as a conditioning stimulation (CS). This CS significantly suppressed the H-reflex amplitude during the early stance phase, whereas the same CS significantly facilitated the H-reflex amplitude during the late stance phase. The CS alone did not produce detectable changes in the full-wave rectified electromyogram of the SOL. This result indicates that presynaptic mechanisms driven by the activation of low-threshold cutaneous afferents in the contralateral foot play a role in regulating the transmission between the Ia terminal and motoneurons in a phase-dependent manner. The modulation pattern of the crossed conditioning effect on the SOL H-reflex may be functionally relevant for the left-right coordination of leg movements during bipedal walking.Entities:
Keywords: Cutaneous inputs; Interlimb coordination; Phase-dependency; Presynaptic inhibition; Walking
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26573576 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-015-4463-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972