Literature DB >> 8389002

Neuromuscular response in man to repetitive nerve stimulation.

H Morita1, M Shindo, S Yanagawa, N Yanagisawa.   

Abstract

Paired stimulation has been used extensively in clinical neurophysiology. We studied change in the sizes of compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) and compound nerve action potentials (CNAPs) in humans after a single electrical stimulus to the peripheral nerve. For the paired stimuli, potentials elicited by the first stimuli were used as the test responses. When the interstimulus intervals were varied, the second potentials underwent refractoriness and then were facilitated up to 20-30 ms, thereafter being depressed for 160-200 ms. When intensities were graded at fixed intervals for motor fibers the maximal effect was obtained with liminal stimulation, but was no longer observed at supramaximal stimulation. When the intensity used to obtain M-responses was half the maximum, maximal facilitations were 35% (CNAP) and 17% (CMAP) of the first potential, the respective maximal depressions being 13% and 42%. When the sizes of the two CNAPs were equalized by adjusting the second stimuli, the CMAP was facilitated (26%) up to 65 ms, thereafter being depressed (13%). These results must be taken into account when making clinical examinations that use paired stimulation.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8389002     DOI: 10.1002/mus.880160611

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Muscle Nerve        ISSN: 0148-639X            Impact factor:   3.217


  4 in total

1.  Motor pathway function in normoalbuminuric IDDM patients.

Authors:  H Andersen; J F Nielsen; P L Poulsen; C E Mogensen; J Jakobsen
Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  1995-10       Impact factor: 10.122

2.  Progressive decrease in heteronymous monosynaptic Ia facilitation with human ageing.

Authors:  H Morita; M Shindo; S Yanagawa; T Yoshida; H Momoi; N Yanagisawa
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 1.972

3.  Recovery cycles of posterior root-muscle reflexes evoked by transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation and of the H reflex in individuals with intact and injured spinal cord.

Authors:  Ursula S Hofstoetter; Brigitta Freundl; Heinrich Binder; Karen Minassian
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-12-26       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Novel human models for elucidating mechanisms of rate-sensitive H-reflex depression.

Authors:  Ya-Ju Chang; Yu-Ching Liu; Miao-Ju Hsu; Chia-Ying Fang; Alice M Wong; Stacey L DeJong; Richard K Shields
Journal:  Biomed J       Date:  2020-02-26       Impact factor: 4.910

  4 in total

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