Acute modulation of common synaptic inputs and motor unit discharge rates following neuromuscular electrical stimulation superimposed onto voluntary contractions

在自主收缩的基础上叠加神经肌肉电刺激后,常见突触输入和运动单元放电率的急性调节

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Superimposing neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) onto voluntary contractions induces specific neuro-physiological adaptations that may have a direct effect on force related outcomes. This study investigated motor unit discharge characteristics and force steadiness following three acute experimental conditions: NMES superimposed onto isometric contractions (NMES + ISO), passive NMES, and isometric contractions only (ISO). METHODS: Seventeen healthy volunteers participated in the study. Each condition involved 20 intermittent (6s contraction/6s rest) isometric ankle dorsi flexions at 20% of their maximum voluntary contraction (MVIC). NMES was delivered to the tibialis anterior (TA) during NMES and NMES + ISO. High-density surface electromyography (HDsEMG) was used to record myoelectric activity in the TA during steady force-matching contractions, at 10% MVIC, performed immediately after each experimental condition. Motor unit discharge rate (DR) and inter-spike variability (ISIvar) were analyzed from decomposed HDsEMG signals. Coherence analysis was performed to evaluate the strength of common synaptic input across different frequency bands and the proportion of common synaptic input (pCSI) received by spinal motoneurons. Force steadiness was evaluated using the coefficient of variation of force (Force(CoV)). RESULTS: NMES + ISO significantly increased motor unit DR compared to baseline and post-intervention NMES. NMES + ISO also induced an increase in pCSI compared to baseline, ISO and NMES. Force(CoV) was reduced after NMES + ISO compared to all experimental conditions, indicating improved force steadiness. DISCUSSION: These results suggest that superimposing NMES onto voluntary contractions can enhance motor unit firing rate and pCSI at low force levels. These adaptations seem to positively contribute to force steadiness, likely by engaging filtering mechanisms which minimize the independent synaptic noise affecting motor control. These findings provide new perspectives on the adaptations induced by NMES exercise, highlighting some of the neuro-physiological mechanisms involved and enriching our knowledge of how the neuromuscular system responds and adapts to NMES-based interventions.

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