The activity of 50 single motor units was recorded in the biceps brachii muscle of human subjects while they performed submaximal isometric elbow flexion contractions that were sustained to induce fatigue. The purposes of this study were to examine the influence of fatigue on motor unit threshold force and to determine the relationship between the threshold force of recruitment and the initial interimpulse interval on the discharge rates of single motor units during a fatiguing contraction. The discharge rate of most motor units that were active from the beginning of the contraction declined during the fatiguing contraction, whereas the discharge rates of most newly recruited units were either constant or increased slightly. The absolute threshold forces of recruitment and derecruitment decreased, and the variability of interimpulse intervals increased after the fatigue task. The change in motor unit discharge rate during the fatigue task was related to the initial rate, but the direction of the change in discharge rate could not be predicted from the threshold force of recruitment or the variability in the interimpulse intervals. The discharge rate of most motor units declined despite an increase in the excitatory drive to the motoneuron pool during the fatigue task.
1. The activity of single motor units was recorded in the first dorsal interosseus muscle of human subjects while they performed an isometric ramp-and-hold maneuver. Motor-unit activity was characterized before and after fatigue by the use of a branched bipolar electrode that was positioned subcutaneously over the test muscle. Activity was characterized in terms of the forces of recruitment and derecruitment and the discharge pattern. The purpose was to determine, before and after fatigue, whether motor-unit activity was affected by the direction in which the force was exerted. 2. Regardless of the task during prefatigue trials, interimpulse intervals were 1) more variable during increases or decreases in force than when force was held constant at the target value (4-6% above the recruitment force), and 2) more clustered around an arbitrary central value than would be expected with a normal (Gaussian) distribution. Both effects were seen during the flexion and abduction tasks. The behavior of low-threshold motor units in first dorsal interosseus is thus largely unaffected by the direction of the force exerted by the index finger. The absence of a task (i.e., a direction of force) effect suggests that the resultant force vector about the metacarpophalangeal joint of the index finger is not coded in terms of discrete populations of motor units, but, rather, it is based on the net muscle activity about the joint. 3. Motor-unit behavior during and after fatigue showed that the relatively homogeneous behavior seen before fatigue could be severely disrupted. The fatiguing protocol involved the continuous repetition, to the endurance limit, of a 15-s ramp-and-hold maneuver in which the abduction target force was 50% of maximum and was held for 10-s epochs (ramps up and down were approximately 2 s each). Motor-unit threshold was assessed by the forces of recruitment and derecruitment associated with each cycle of the fatigue test. Changes in recruitment force during the protocol were either minimal or, when present, not systematic. In contrast, the derecruitment force of all units exhibited a marked and progressive increase over the course of the test. 4. After the fatigue test, when the initial threshold tasks were repeated, the behavior of most motor units changed. These changes included the derecruitment of previously active motor units, the recruitment of additional motor units, and an increased discharge variability of units that remained recruited. The variation in recruitment order seemed to be much greater than that reported previously for nonfatiguing conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
SUMMARY1. The main purpose of this study was to quantify the adaptation of spinal motoneurons to sustained and intermittent activation, using an extracellular route of stimulating current application to single test cells, in contrast to an intracellular route, as has been used previously. In addition, associations were tested between firing rate properties of the tested cells and other type (size)-related properties of these cells and their motor units.2. Motoneurons supplying the medial gastrocnemius muscle of the deeply anaesthetized cat were stimulated for 240 s with microelectrodes which passed sustained extracellular current at 1-25 times the threshold for repetitive firing. Many cells were also tested following a rest period with intermittent 1 s current pulses (duration 600 ms) at the same relative stimulus strength. Cell discharge was assessed from the EMG of the motor unit innervated by the test neuron. The motoneurons and their motor units were assigned to four categories (i.e. types FF, FR, S and F; where F = FF + FR) based on conventional criteria. In all, twenty F (16 FF, 4 FR) and fourteen S cells were studied with sustained stimulation. Thirty of these cells (17 F, 13 S) 4. All cells exhibited a delay from the onset of current to the first spike, followed by a brief accelerating discharge that was followed by a slower drop in firing rate. Some cells (21 of 34 with sustained activation; 20 of 32 with intermittent) exhibited doublet discharges (interspike intervals < 10 ms) that were intermingled with the more predominant singlet discharges. Doublets were more common in the S cell type.5. With sustained activation, the mean delay from the onset of current to the first spike was 2-6 + 1 1 s for F cells, and 3-2 + 1-9 s for S cells. The time required to reach peak frequency of singlet discharge following repetitive firing onset was significantly shorter for F than S cells (7-0 + 5 0 vs. 14-3 + 13-6 s) and the peak singlet frequencies also differed significantly (F, 28-0 + 7-7 Hz vs. S, 15-6 + 2-5 Hz). Subsequently, the mean magnitude of firing rate reduction from the peak to 24 s later was significantly greater for F cells than that for S cells (16-2 + 6 Hz vs. 5X8 + 3 Hz). These gradual reductions in firing frequency for both F and S cells during the course of their sustained stimulation were qualitatively similar to the late adaptation observed in previous studies that had employed intracellular stimulation.6. The time course of firing frequency for each unit with sustained activation was fitted with a double-exponential equation: the first time constant (T1) for the initial increase in frequency was relatively short (F, 2X5 + 2-1 s vs. S, 3-7 + 4-1 s). The second time constant (r2) was significantly shorter for F than S cells (130-7 + 98-4 s vs. 750 0 + 402-4 s). It is argued that the r2 values provided a quantitative description of the type of adaptation termed 'late' in previous studies.7. The responses to intermittent stimulation were qualitatively similar to those seen with sustained activat...
Melanopsin is found in only approximately 2% of mouse retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), making these RGCs uniquely and directly photosensitive. Given that the majority of RGCs die after axotomy and that grafting of a peripheral nerve to the eye provides a permissive environment for axon regrowth, the present study examined the survival and axonal regrowth of melanopsin-containing RGCs in mice. One month after optic nerve transection and grafting, RGCs with regrown axons were labeled from the grafts and retinae were processed to visualize melanopsin and TUJ1. Melanopsin-positive and negative RGCs were counted and compared to axotomized RGCs from ungrafted eyes and uninjured RGCs. Melanopsin-positive RGCs showed a 3-fold increase in survival rate compared to non-melanopsin RGCs. Despite this enhanced survival, melanopsin-containing RGCs did not show increased axon regrowth into nerve grafts.
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