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. 2003 Sep;152(1):133-6.
doi: 10.1007/s00221-003-1547-9. Epub 2003 Jul 24.

Evidence for recurrent inhibition of reciprocal inhibition from soleus to tibialis anterior in man

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Evidence for recurrent inhibition of reciprocal inhibition from soleus to tibialis anterior in man

M Baret et al. Exp Brain Res. 2003 Sep.

Abstract

Reciprocal inhibition between ankle flexors and extensors has been the subject of numerous studies in Man. They have demonstrated that this reciprocal inhibition is in all likelihood caused by a disynaptic pathway at least partly fed by Ia afferents. It is thus generally agreed that this reciprocally organized inhibition between ankle flexors and extensors in Man is similar to the reciprocal Ia inhibition described in the cat. This conclusion has, however, been challenged, when Jankowska and McCrea described in the cat a non-reciprocal group I inhibition involving interneurones co-excited by Ia and Ib afferents and mediating inhibition to both antagonistic and non-antagonistic motoneurones. The only way to distinguish between reciprocal Ia inhibition and non-reciprocal group I inhibition is to test if the inhibition is blocked by recurrent inhibition, since only Ia interneurones are inhibited by recurrent inhibition. In the present study, reciprocal inhibition from soleus to tibialis anterior was thus investigated following activation of soleus-coupled Renshaw cells in normal human subjects. It was found that reciprocal inhibition induced in tibialis anterior motoneurones by the activation of soleus group I afferents is deeply depressed by activation of soleus-coupled Renshaw cells. This finding provides the missing data to identify disynaptic inhibition between antagonistic ankle muscles as a reciprocal Ia inhibition.

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