کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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5738845 | 1615061 | 2017 | 7 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
![عکس صفحه اول مقاله: Research articleRhythmic wrist movements facilitate the soleus H-reflex and non-voluntary air-stepping in humans Research articleRhythmic wrist movements facilitate the soleus H-reflex and non-voluntary air-stepping in humans](/preview/png/5738845.png)
- Facilitatory effect of rhythmic wrist motion on leg rhythmogenesis was demonstrated.
- Wrist flexion-extension movements potentiated the soleus H-reflex.
- Rhythmicity of motion rather than tension in arm muscles underlay this effect.
- Physiologically relevant hand-foot neural coupling described.
Neural coupling between the upper and lower limbs during human walking is supported by modulation of cross-limb reflexes and the presence of rhythmic activity in the proximal arm muscles. Nevertheless, the involvement of distal arm muscles in cyclic movements and sensorimotor neuromodulation is also suggested given their step-synchronized activation in many locomotor-related tasks (e.g., swimming, skiing, climbing, cycling, crawling, etc.). Here we investigated the effect of rhythmic wrist movements, separately and in conjunction with arm swinging, on the characteristics of non-voluntary cyclic leg movements evoked by muscle vibration in a gravity neutral position and on the soleus H-reflex of the stationary legs. For the H-reflex modulation, five conditions were compared: stationary arms, voluntary alternating upper limb swinging, combined upper limb and wrist motion, wrist movements only and motion of the upper limbs with addition of load. Rhythmic wrist movements significantly facilitated the amplitude of non-voluntary leg oscillations, including ankle joint oscillations, and the H-reflex. The latter effect was related to rhythmicity of wrist motion rather than to a simple extra tension in the upper limb muscles (a kind of the Jendrassik manoeuvre) since adding resistance to arm oscillations (without flexion-extension in the wrist joint) had an opposite inhibitory effect on the H-reflex. Our results further support the existence of connections between the distal parts of the upper and lower extremities at the neural level, suggesting that wrist joint movements can be an important component of motor neurorehabilitation.
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Journal: Neuroscience Letters - Volume 638, 18 January 2017, Pages 39-45