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J Physiol Vol 493, Issue Pt 3 pp 895-908
Copyright © 1996 by The Physiological Society
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Pulsatile motor output in human finger movements is not dependent on the stretch reflex.

J Wessberg and A B Vallbo

Department of Physiology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden. wessberg@physiol.gu.se

1. Stretch perturbations were delivered during slow voluntary finger movements with the aim of exploring the role of the stretch reflex in generating the 8-10 Hz discontinuities that characterize these movements. Afferent activity from muscle spindle primary endings in the finger extensor muscles was recorded from the radial nerve, along with the EMG activity of these muscles, and kinematics of the relevant metacarpo-phalangeal joint. 2. Perturbations elicited a distinct response from the muscle spindles appearing at the recording electrode after 13 ms, and weak reflex responses from the muscle with peak values at 53 and 63 ms during flexion and extension, respectively. 3. The time relations between kinematics, spindle firing and modulations of EMG activity elicited by the perturbations were compared with those of the self-generated discontinuities. These analyses indicate that stretch reflex mechanisms cannot account for the modulations of EMG activity that give rise to successive 8-10 Hz discontinuities. 4. A comparison of the reflex responses to perturbations with the EMG modulations during self-generated movements indicates that the reflex was too weak to account for the pulsatile motor output during voluntary movements. 5. By inference it was concluded that the 8-10 Hz discontinuities during self-generated movements are probably generated by mechanisms within the central nervous system.




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S. Erimaki and C. N. Christakos
Coherent Motor Unit Rhythms in the 6-10 Hz Range During Time-Varying Voluntary Muscle Contractions: Neural Mechanism and Relation to Rhythmical Motor Control
J Neurophysiol, February 1, 2008; 99(2): 473 - 483.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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