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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naturwissenschaften 77 (1990), S. 247-249 
    ISSN: 1432-1904
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Natural Sciences in General
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Renshaw cells ; Motor axons ; Random stimulation ; Synaptic transmission ; Facilitation ; Depression ; Time constants
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In 9 adult anaesthetized cats, 22 lumbosacral Renshaw cells recorded with NaCl-filled micropipettes were activated by random stimulation of ventral roots or peripheral nerves. The stimulus patterns had mean rates of 9.5–13 or 20–23 or 45 pulses per second and were pseudo-Poisson; short intervals below ca. 5 ms (except in two cases) were excluded. The Renshaw cell responses were evaluated by two kinds of peristimulus-time histograms (PSTHs). “Conventional” PSTHs were calculated by averaging the Renshaw cell discharge with respect to all the stimuli in a train. These PSTHs showed an early excitatory response which was often followed by a longer-lasting slight reduction of the discharge probability. These two response components were positively correlated. “Conditional” PSTHs were determined by averaging the Renshaw cell discharge with respect to the second (“test”) stimulus in pairs of stimuli which were separated by varied intervals, δ. The direct effect of the first “conditional” response was subtracted from the excitation following the second (“test”) stimulus so as to isolate the effect caused by the second stimulus per se. After such a correction, the effect of the first “conditioning” stimulus showed pure depression, pure facilitation or mixed facilitation/depression. Analysis of such conditioning curves yielded two time constants of facilitation (ranges: ca. 4–35 ms and 93–102 ms) and two of depression (ranges: ca. 7–25 ms and 50–161 ms). It is concluded that these time constants are compatible with processes of short-term synaptic plasticity known from other synapses. Other processes such as afterhyperpolarization and mutual inhibition probably are of less importance.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Red nucleus ; Renshaw cells ; Moto-neurone-Renshaw cell linkage
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The red nucleus region was stereotaxically stimulated with short trains of high-frequency alternating current pulses in anaesthetized cats. The effects were studied, in contralateral lumbar segments, on the responses of microrecorded individual Renshaw cells (RCs) to antidromic or orthodromic test shocks of ventral root or muscle nerve fibres. Monosynaptic reflexes (MRs) of their motoneurone pools were recorded from one of the cut lumbar ventral roots. Averages of 10–20 replicate test responses of the RC (converted into instantaneous frequency curves, IFCs) and of the MR shapes were computed and graphically displayed. 2. Orthodromic (afferent) test shocks induced simultaneously MRs as well as responses of a RC belonging to the same motor pool. From their paired records at systematically varied shock strengths, whole “linkage characteristics” of the relation between the two events could be obtained, representing the functional linkage from the motoraxon collaterals to the RC under study. The overall result of rubral conditioning was a change in the course of the characteristic, which indicated a reduction of this linkage (= relative inhibition of the RC against its recurrent input). 3. Sequential trials with test shocks of constant, submaximal strength were performed with 45 individual RCs. The clearest results were obtained with RC responses to antidromic ventral root shocks: 65% of the RCs were partially inhibited by rubral conditioning. Interposed minor facilitory subcomponents could be seen in the course of inhibited IFCs. Mixed sequences of manifest inhibitory/facilitory effects were observed in 11%; reversed sequences (facilitory/inhibitory) did not occur. A pure but weak facilitation was found in only one case, paralleled by an increase of the MR. RCs belonging to either extensor or flexor motor pools were affected about equally. A little over 20% of the tested RCs remained uninfluenced by rubral stimulation. 4. The MRs, induced by constant, submaximal, orthodromic test shocks, were usually enhanced with only few exceptions, by rubral stimulation. The effects on the orthodromic RC responses were mainly inhibitory, but could be more or less masked by the concurrent increase of the MR, providing a stronger recurrent input to the RC. Such inhibition could be uncovered, however, by observing the above described linkage change. 5. Variation of several parameters of rubral conditioning (train duration, timing of train with respect to test shock, strength of train) modified the inhibitory effects on antidromic RC responses to a certain extent without changing their principal character. Higher conditioning strengths frequently induced mass discharges of previously silent motoneurones, but at the same time an increased inhibition of the concurrent RC responses. 6. Spontaneous RC activity (in the absence of test stimuli) occurred infrequently and was weak and interrupted by silent periods. When this persisted long enough for testing repeated rubral stimulation, a strong initial inhibition lasting up to several hundred ms was found, sometimes followed by some oscillations of the average discharge rate. 7. The predominant combination of concurrent effects of the conditioning, namely, inhibition of RCs and facilitation of motoneurones, indicated independent (and mostly divergent) control of the two target neurones by the red nucleus. It is concluded that in this way the RCs can be flexibly and transiently decoupled to some degree from their recurrent motoneuronal input.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 63 (1986), S. 639-649 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motor units ; Muscle spindle afferents ; Nonlinear responses of motor units and spindles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Successive motor unit (MU) twitches often do not sum linearly. Also, muscle spindle (MS) afferents may react nonlinearly to MU contractions occurring at short intervals. Little data is presently available on the interactions between two (or more) MUs regarding their effects on tension output and MS responses. We have studied these effects in cat Mm. gastrocnemius medialis (MG), soleus and semitendinosus. In adult anaesthetized cats, MUs of the muscle under study were electrically stimulated via their ventral root axons with random sequences of brief pulses having mean rates between 6 and 12 pulses per second. Isometric tension fluctuations were recorded from the muscle under study, and discharge patterns of MS afferents (Ia and group II) were recorded from dorsal root filaments. A crosscorrelation analysis was performed to display linear and nonlinear effects evoked by selected time constellations of MU activations. 1) 18 (67%) of 27 MG MUs showed marked potentiation of the second of two twitches in response to pairs of stimuli separated by 5 to about 25 ms. The remainder of these and 16 of the soleus MUs did not exhibit conspicuous nonlinearities. — 2) MS responses to such pairs of MU activations usually showed a prolonged spindle pause. — 3) About 28% of 36pairs of MG MUs produced twitch tension less than expected for linear summation if activated nearly simultaneously. — 4) If two MUs both produced a spindle pause and possibly a relaxation discharge in an MS afferent, the near-synchronous activation of the units produced respective discharge variations that were less than expected for linear summation. If one MU produced an early discharge, contraction of another MU would often prevent it. — These results are discussed in regard to mechanisms of tremor suppression.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 21 (1974), S. 353-360 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Renshaw cells ; Muscle stretch ; Phasic tonic motoneurones
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary a) Renshaw cells (RC) were recorded during ramp stretch of the GS muscle. In 90% of the analysed cells, the frequency and duration of the phasic response were enhanced by increases in both the length and rate of stretch. b) The tonic response, which was observed in about 30% of the analysed cells, increased at higher stretch lengths. c) After application of the cholinergic blocking agent mecamylamine or after severance of the GS nerve, the Renshaw stretch response was abolished. d) The results lend some support to the hypothesis that RCs are triggered predominantly by large phasic motoneurones. The smaller tonic motoneurones seem to provide some supporting background input to the RCs.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Muscle spindles ; Motor units ; Stretch reflex ; Parallel information transmission
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Certain features of signal transmission from multiple α-axons to multiple Ia fibres via extrafusal muscle tissue were studied by stimulating three ventral root filaments separately and simultaneously and by recording spike trains from three dorsal root filaments. 2. Post-stimulus time histograms (PSTH) revealed widely graded influences of single motor unit contractions on different muscle spindles, thus confirming results of Binder et al. (1976, 1980a). 3. In most instances, the signal transmission from a single motor unit to a single Ia fibre was disturbed to varying degrees by concomitant activity from other motor units. 4. This deterioration of signal transmission can probably be compensated for, at least in part, by correlations between discharge patterns of two or more Ia fibres induced by the “common input” of motor unit activity. 5. These correlations showed a topographical pattern such that a peak in the cross-correlogram (CCH) occurred at zero time for pairs of spindles located virtually in parallel to each other, and was shifted away from zero time as a function of the serial distance between spindles in the longitudinal muscle fibre direction. 6. Fusimotor innervation had complex effects on correlations between Ia fibre discharge patterns. It might de-correlate the latter as well as favour new correlations. 7. The possible role of topographical correlation patterns in the afferent reflex limb for tremor suppression is discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 45 (1982), S. 417-427 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Primary muscle spindle endings ; Motor units ; Tremor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Discharge patterns of group Ia afferents of muscle spindles in the (isometric) cat semitendinosus muscle were recorded when subjected to the influence of contractions of three motor units elicited by stimulation of three α-efferents with different regular or stochastic stimulus patterns. In order to study conditioning interactions between motor unit contractions, defined time constellations of stimuli to different motor units were isolated from the stimulus trains by electronic means. This technique was also applied to discharge patterns of two Ia fibres to isolate “correlated discharges”. The effects of defined time constellations of stimuli upon discharge patterns of single Ia afferents or “correlated discharges” of pairs of Ia afferents were assessed by poststimulus time histograms (PSTHs). It turned out that the influence exerted by one motor unit on spindle discharges was more or less strongly modulated by actions of the other motor units, dependent on the relative timing of their contractions. These effects could in part be explained by the relative locations of motor units and spindles within the muscle. These results are discussed with respect to possible mechanisms of low-amplitude physiological tremor.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Primary muscle spindle endings ; Discharge statistics ; Isometric muscle contraction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A feature frequently observed in interspike interval histograms (IH) derived from stationary Ia fibre discharge patterns was a bimodality suggesting a mixed population composed of two sub-populations of possibly different origins. To verify this hypothesis a separation of these subpopulations was attempted by assuming a Gaussian distribution for the longer intervals. The success of such a separation depended on the distinctness of the histogram peaks and the relative sizes of each mode. Both factors in turn depended on the overall muscle length and, hence, on the mean spindle discharge rate. The smaller intervals were then isolated from the spike trains and submitted to further statistical analysis. By averaging overall muscle tension with respect to the smaller intervals, the latter could often be linked to tension trajectories which were of higher amplitude and faster time course than the trajectories obtained by averaging with respect to the rest of the spikes. In some cases, autocorrelation histograms of isolated small intervals as well as serial correlograms computed for all intervals indicated that some muscle spindle afferents responded sensitively to activity of single motor units. This would confirm recent results of Cameron et al. (1980).
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 400 (1984), S. 100-105 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Spike train ; Spectral analysis ; Coherence ; Frequency response ; Motor unit ; Muscle spindle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Spectral analysis provides a description of the moments of random signals and enables the characterization of the behaviour of systems in terms of input-output relations. The merits of such an approach in the study of signal transmission in skeletal muscle are described in this paper. The representation of neural spike trains as impulse sequences and the subsequent treatment appropriate for this kind of analysis are discussed together with some practical problems. Spectral analysis of muscle afferent signals is applied to data obtained from cat experiments, and the use of the related frequency-domain techniques is demonstrated on a subsystem of the stretch reflex.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Biological cybernetics 40 (1981), S. 59-70 
    ISSN: 1432-0770
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Computer Science , Physics
    Notes: Abstract This paper continues the investigation of a three-loop representation of the segmental muscle stretch reflex system introduced in a preceding communication. Frequency response characteristics were computed for open-loop conditions, control and disturbance signal inputs under a variety of conditions: (i) “in parallel” and “in series” peripheral arrangements of muscle compartments, (ii) various patterns of central connectivity, (iii) various recruitment levels of motor units, (iv) various overall reflex gains, (v) absence or presence of muscle spindle accleration sensitivity. These computations disclosed a number of mechanisms by which the nervous system might improve system stability and behaviour. These mechanisms are discussed with regard to physiological data.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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