Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/11838
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Type: Journal article
Title: Movements modulate the reflex responses of human flexor pollicis longus to stretch
Author: Wallace, C.
Miles, T.
Citation: Experimental Brain Research, 1998; 118(118):105-110
Publisher: SPRINGER VERLAG
Issue Date: 1998
ISSN: 0014-4819
1432-1106
Abstract: The reflex responses to brisk, ramp stretch perturbations of the human flexor pollicis longus muscle (FPL) were recorded during isometric and slow concentric or eccentric contractions at similar levels of muscle excitation. The subjects flexed their thumb to push down against a thumb-rest, whose position was controlled by a servo-controlled motor. In different runs, the stretch perturbations were imposed when the thumb-rest was stationary (isometric) or was flexing or extending the interphalangeal joint of the thumb at a constant velocity, i.e. during concentric or eccentric contractions of FPL. The latency of the most prominent component of the electromyographic reflex in the isometrically contracting muscle was about 60 ms, measured from the command signal. The amplitude of this response was sharply reduced during the non-isometric contractions. While not dependent on the direction, this modulation of the reflex response increased with the speed of active movement of the interphalangeal joint (flexion or extension). The response was greatly reduced during concentric or eccentric movements as slow as 1.6 mm x s[-1] (approximately 5 degrees x s (-1) at the joint). When the force rather than the position of the thumb-rest was servo-controlled, the stretch response to perturbation again diminished with speed in a self-paced flexion task, compared with an isometric "hold" condition.
Keywords: Hand
Muscle, Skeletal
Humans
Reflex, Stretch
Electromyography
Reaction Time
Movement
Muscle Contraction
Isometric Contraction
Reference Values
Adult
Middle Aged
DOI: 10.1007/s002210050259
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s002210050259
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 7
Physiology publications

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