Load Rather Than Length Sensitive Feedback Contributes to Soleus Muscle Activity During Human Treadmill Walking

Author:

af Klint Richard1,Mazzaro Nazarena1,Nielsen Jens Bo2,Sinkjaer Thomas13,Grey Michael J.2

Affiliation:

1. Center for Sensory–Motor Interaction, Department of Health Science and Technology, Aalborg University, Aalborg;

2. Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology and Department of Exercise and Sport Sciences, The Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen; and

3. Danish National Research Foundation, Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Walking requires a constant adaptation of locomotor output from sensory afferent feedback mechanisms to ensure efficient and stable gait. We investigated the nature of the sensory afferent feedback contribution to the soleus motoneuronal drive and to the corrective stretch reflex by manipulating body load and ankle joint angle. The volunteers walked on a treadmill (∼3.6 km/h) connected to a body weight support (BWS) system. To manipulate the load sensitive afferents the level of BWS was switched between 5 and 30% of body weight. The effect of transient changes in BWS on the soleus stretch reflex was measured by presenting dorsiflexion perturbations (∼5°, 360–400°/s) in mid and late stances. Short (SLRs) and medium latency reflexes (MLRs) were quantified in a 15 ms analysis window. The MLR decreased with decreased loading ( P = 0.045), but no significant difference was observed for the SLR ( P = 0.13). Similarly, the effect of the BWS was measured on the unload response, i.e., the depression in soleus activity following a plantar-flexion perturbation (∼5.6°, 203–247°/s), quantified over a 50 ms analysis window. The unload response decreased with decreased load ( P > 0.001), but was not significantly affected ( P = 0.45) by tizanidine induced depression of the MLR ( P = 0.039, n = 6). Since tizanidine is believed to depress the group II afferent pathway, these results are consistent with the idea that force-related afferent feedback contributes both to the background locomotor activity and to the medium latency stretch reflex. In contrast, length-related afferent feedback may contribute to only the medium latency stretch reflex.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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