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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cellular and molecular life sciences 35 (1979), S. 775-776 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A new method to evaluate the conduction time of the central somatosensory pathway is described. Normative data established in a group of young subjects are reported.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Muscle afferents ; Cutaneous afferents ; Cervical response ; Cortical response ; Monosynaptic reflex
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The possible contribution of low threshold muscle afferents to the postsynaptic component (N13) of the cervical response evoked by electrical stimulation of the median nerve (MN) was investigated in normal subjects. Electroneurographic (ENG) and electromyographic (EMG) correlates of the reflex motoneuronal discharge (RMND) were recorded simultaneously. A. No reflex activity could be elicited by stimulation of the MN at the wrist, at least in the resting subjects, while well developed ENG (P2 efferent volley) and EMG (H reflex) monosynaptic responses occurred following stimulation of the MN at the elbow at suitable strengths. In neither case could a surface correlate of interneuronal activity evoked by muscle afferents be demonstrated. B. Recruitment curves showed that at stimulus intensities above maximal for the H reflex both P2 and H responses started to decrease until they completely disappeared, while N13 showed further enhancement. C. Subthreshold conditioning stimulation of the MN enhanced both P2 and H responses, while vibratory muscle stimuli provoked a clearcut suppression of these two responses. In contrast, N13 was completely unaffected by either manœuvre. D. No cervical evoked activity could be detected following tendon tapping of the anterior forearm muscles in spite of the appearance of well developed cortical responses and the ENG and EMG correlates of the T reflex. E. Conditioning volleys elicited by tendon taps of the anterior forearm muscles suppressed both P2 and H responses following stimulation of the MN at the elbow without affecting the related N13 component. F. Conditioning supramaximal stimulation of the MN at the wrist suppressed the N13 component of the cervical response evoked by stimulation of the MN at the elbow without affecting the related reflex responses. No component chronologically related to the RMND could be recorded at the posterior neck region during suppression of N13, thus ruling out the possibility that failure to detect the RMND (as well as its interneuronal concomitants) with cervical electrodes is due to a masking effect of the N13 component. G. Conditioning tendon taps of anterior forearm muscles provoked a clearcut reduction of the primary cortical response to finger stimulation without affecting the postsynaptic component of the related cervical response. It is concluded that neither segmental (motoneuronal or interneuronal in origin) nor ascending postsynaptic impulses generated in the spinal cord by stimulation of low threshold muscle afferents contribute to N13, the latter being probably due to activation of both short and long axoned spinal neurons by cutaneous afferents.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Monosynaptic reflex ; Synaptic transmission ; Facilitation ; Inhibition ; Ventral root discharge
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The neurographic activity evoked either by stimulation of the tibial nerve at the popliteal fossa or by percussion of the Achilles tendon has been recorded at lumbar and thigh levels, in order to find out whether conduction time, temporal dispersion and central delay of the neural volleys underlying the monosynaptic reflex (H or T) may change (a) as a function of stimulus intensity; (b) under facilitatory or inhibitory experimental conditions; (c) “spontaneously”, i.e. during the steady state. The reflexly evoked ventral root discharge (VRD) decreases in latency with increasing stimulus intensity up to the maximum reflex response in the absence of changes in afferent (thigh to spine) or efferent (spine to thigh) conduction times. Reduction of the central delay was greater with mechanical than electrical stimulation, probably due to the combined effect of spatial and temporal summation under the former experimental condition. The latency of the VRD related to the maximal H response was not further modified by supramaximal stimulus strengths. The Jendrassik manœuvre caused a significant decrease in latency of the VRD, the opposite effect being observed during calf muscle vibration. A significant relationship between amplitude and latency of single VRD s could be demonstrated during the “steady state”. Our data point to the existence of a positive correlation between the size of the motoneuronal pool activated by an afferent volley and speed of transmission in the reflex pathway, both during the “steady state” and under either facilitatory or inhibitory experimental conditions, provided that the test stimulus strength does not exceed the maximum reflex response (H or T). No detectable signs of peripheral dispersion of the VRD could be demonstrated, irrespective of the stimulus employed: this suggests that the axon diameters of the moto-neurones contributing to the monosynaptic reflex fall within a fairly narrow distribution
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1459
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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