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Firing rate trajectories of human occipitofrontalis motor units in response to triangular voluntary contraction intensity.
Kirk, Eric A; Zero, Alexander M; Rice, Charles L.
Affiliation
  • Kirk EA; School of Kinesiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, Canada.
  • Zero AM; School of Kinesiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, Canada.
  • Rice CL; School of Kinesiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, Canada. crice@uwo.ca.
Exp Brain Res ; 239(12): 3661-3670, 2021 Dec.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34617127
ABSTRACT
During voluntary contractions, limb muscle motor unit (MU) firing rates accelerate over a small force range and saturate in response to increasing contraction intensity. In comparison, facial muscles are cranially innervated, and some function without crossing joints. Therefore, the MU firing rate behaviour and characteristics of saturation were explored in a facial muscle that moves skin and facia during voluntary contractions. We evaluated the firing rate trajectory in response to triangular voluntary contraction ramps in the occipitofrontalis muscle of 11 adult participants. Intramuscular electromyography of the frontalis aspect was used to record single MU trains followed up to maximal voluntary contraction intensities. Firing rates were measured from each MU sample, with the firing rate trajectory fit as both exponential (i.e., saturation) and linear models that were compared statistically. The rate coding behaviour of frontalis MUs was broad, as the peak firing rate (mean 76 Hz) was ninefold greater than the firing rate at recruitment threshold (mean 8 Hz). Across 20 MU samples, only 40% (8 MU samples) were determined to have a firing rate trajectory that saturated and had slow acceleration in response to increasing voluntary drive until maximum. The exponential curve of the firing rate trajectory had ~ tenfold lower acceleration as compared to prior reports in limb muscles. These results across all MU samples indicated that voluntary control of the frontalis muscle requires relatively slower accelerating or linear MU firing rate trajectories, suggesting that movements of facial muscles may be directly representative of extrinsic synaptic inputs.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Motor Neurons / Muscle Contraction Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Adult / Humans Language: En Journal: Exp Brain Res Year: 2021 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Canada

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Motor Neurons / Muscle Contraction Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Adult / Humans Language: En Journal: Exp Brain Res Year: 2021 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Canada