191 SUMMARYA new ep!muscular method for stimulating single motor units (m.u.'s) in free prepared muscle is described. Unit isolation is stable and can be continued for long periods. The method is compared with an intramuscular stimulation technique and histological evidence is presented to confirm the validity of both techniques.Conventional methods for stimulation of individual motor-units {m.u.'s), i.e. stimulation of a.motoneuron or isolated ventral roots, are time-consuming and technically demanding. Mczeover such niethods are not suitable for human muscles. Buchthal et al.[1] stimulated in human muscle 'bundles of muscle fibres' with intramuscular electrodes. Several investigators [ 7,10--12 ] showed that such intramuscular stimulation may excite fine motor nerve twigs, which may lead to contraction of single m.u.'s.In this paper we will: (i) describe the difficulties involved in intramuscular stimulation of small musclm (EDL and soleus of rat); (fi) introduce 'epimuscul~ stimulation' to overcome these difficulties; (ifl) provide histological confirmation of the validity of both iutra-and epimuscular methods for single unit stimulation; (iv) ~ their limitations. The criterion we used ~~t all-or-nothing force and EMG adjured Close to the threshold value(1). ~ce our ex~" n~ dmmmd long term stable simulation of the same m:a.a second critmion~wmin~oduced, i.e. unvarying force and EMG reswhen ~ ~ ~al ~hbld stimulus amplitude (II), which
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