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Neural control & recruitment Muscle and Nerve Part II Lecture 2 Types of neural fibres Fibres with the lowest threshold have the greatest conduction velocity Large diameter fibres have greatest conduction velocity Motor Units “an a-motoneuron and all the muscle fibres it innervates” • Size – Small motor units • Provide fine control • eg: eye (100 x 10 fibre units) – Medium motor units • eg: hand (100 x 300 fibre units) – Large motor units • Gross control (strength) • eg: gastrocnemius (600 x 2000 fibre units) • Provide the basis of the: “All or none principle” Stimulation of an a-motoneuron will cause contraction of every innervated muscle fibre Larger muscles, larger numbers of motor neurons Topographical organization of motor nuclei • a.k.a. motor neuron pools • Flexor-Extensor rule – ventral: extensors – dorsal: flexors • Proximal-distal rule – medial: proximal muscles – lateral: distal muscles F P • Parallel control systems D E Ventral horn – proximal: postural – distal : manipulative Motor axons: size and velocity • Motor axons vary in diameter (cat, 10-20 µm) • Motor axons differ in their conduction velocities (cat, 40-100 m/s) • Motor axons to slow muscles have lower conduction velocities and smaller in diameter • Large diameter axons have large cell bodies in the ventral horn of spinal cord Control of motor units • Denny-Brown (1929) muscles with more slow units are activated preferentially in tonic contractions, muscles that have more fast units are activated when rapid contraction is needed. • Henneman (1960s onwards) studied this at the level of the motor unit • Motor Unit Recruitment – The primary mechanism whereby a whole skeletal muscle can vary force output Henneman’s Size Principle “Motor Units are recruited in order of their size from small low force units to large high force units” • If motor unit recruitment was the only mechanism to alter force, expect: – Low forces • Small stepwise increments • Consistent with fine control – Higher forces • Larger force increments • Less precise movements Henneman’s Size Principle • Different proportion of the fibre types used dependent on force requirements Henneman Size principle • Recruitment of motor units is SO > FOG (Fatigue Resistant) > FG (Fatigable) ie (I > IIa > IIb) • Small motor neurones, with small units are the most easy to activate. These units receive the most tonic activation • Sizes of units vary in a muscle. Therefore, the size principle gives an automatic gradation of force Motor Unit Characteristics • Small motor units – Slow contracting – Low excitation threshold (i.e. easily excitable) – Easily recruited – Fatigue resistant – Utilised for prolonged daily activities • Posture control, walking • Large motor units – Fast contracting – High excitation threshold (i.e. less easily excitable) – Less easily recruited – Rapidly fatigable – Utilised for high force contractions • sprinting, jumping etc • Recruitment order is small → large • Provided by the Henneman Size Principle Distribution of innervation number across motorneuron pool comprising 120 motor units • Cumulative sum of the number of muscle fibres in successive motor units • Only a small number of the fastest fibres R.M. Enoka and A.J. Fuglevand 2001. Force production • The motor unit represents the final common path by which the CNS sends motor commands to the muscle (Liddell & Sherrington, 1925) • Fibres in a single unit are distributed throughout the muscle and spread the load • Gradation of force by frequency occurs largely in fast motor units • Recruitment is orderly: If the same contraction is performed several times, motor units are activated in a relatively fixed order: Denny-Brown & Pennybacker (1938) • De-recruitment occurs in a fixed order: the motor unit recruited is the first to be derecruited Recruitment of motor units during a voluntary contraction Needle electrodes • Recruitment of two motor units (Unit 1 with a lower recruitment threshold) • Average force response of each motor unit to its action potential. Unit 1 is weaker and has a longer time to peak force Twitch & Tetanic Contractions • Twitch : single stimulation • Tetanus : high-frequency stimulation – Complete force summation – Frequency dependant Rate Coding • Stimulation frequencies – Initial recruitment 8-12 Hz – Steady high-force 20-50 Hz – Ballistic actions • Initial high force generation • May use 150 Hz for 2-3 s • Maintained at lower Hz • Small muscles (panel A) eg: adductor pollicis (hand) – Up to 50% Fmax: motor unit recruitment – >50% Fmax: increase F via rate coding – Enables fine control • Large muscles (panel B) eg: biceps brachii, quadriceps – Motor unit recruitment for 90% Fmax Motor unit recruitment Rate coding Motor unit recruitment Rate coding Comparing muscles further First dorsal interosseus (~120 units, hand) - Small units recruited and fire 9Hz - As force increased, units increased firing frequency and new, larger units recruited and fire at 9Hz. When 40% MVC, all motor units recruited and force modulation provided by firing frequency changes up to 40Hz Deltoid (~1000 units, shoulder) - New units were recruited up to 80 % MVC with initial firing at 13 Hz - Rate modulation not showing much involvement, frequency of units only raised to 25 Hz after initial recruitment - MISMATCH of MVC and maximal available force. This is not seen in small muscles - Differences dependent on the size and function of the muscle Recruitment and the CNS • The sequence of motor unit recruitment is determined by spinal mechanisms, not specified by the brain • A motor command from the brain does not contain information related to which motor units should be activated • Not possible to activate motor units selectively by stimulation at brain • “Upper motorneuron” disorders rarely cause alterations in recruitment What determines contractile force? • • • • Motor unit size (larger motor units, more fibres) Motor unit fibre type (fast fibres larger) Number of motor units (spatial summation) Frequency of stimulation (fusion of tension) Next Lecture: • Length: force length relationship • Velocity: force velocity curve • Series compliance (tendon & cross-bridge)