Nonlinear stretch reflex interaction during cocontraction

1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 943-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. R. Carter ◽  
P. E. Crago ◽  
P. H. Gorman

1. We investigated the role of stretch reflexes in controlling two antagonist muscles acting at the interphalangeal joint in the normal human thumb. Reflex action was compared when either muscle contracted alone and during cocontraction. 2. The total torque of the flexor pollicis longus (FPL) and extensor pollicis longus (EPL) muscles was measured in response to an externally imposed extension of the interphalangeal joint. The initial joint angle and the amplitude of the extension were constant in all experiments, and the preload of the active muscle(s) was varied. Joint torque was measured at the peak of short-latency stretch reflex action during contraction of the FPL alone, contraction of the EPL alone, and during cocontraction. Incremental joint stiffness was calculated as the change in torque divided by the change in angle. 3. Incremental stiffness increased in proportion to the preload torque during single muscle contractions of either the FPL (lengthening disturbances) or the EPL (shortening disturbances). Thus stiffness was not regulated to a constant value in the face of varying loads for either single muscle stretch or release. 4. Incremental stiffness varied across the range of cocontraction levels while the net torque was maintained at approximately 0. Thus net torque alone did not determine the stiffness during cocontraction. 5. The contributions of each muscle to the net intrinsic torque during cocontraction were estimated by scaling the individual muscles' responses so that their sum gave the best fit (in a least-squares sense) to the cocontraction torque before reflex action. The solution is unique because the individual torques have opposite signs, but the stiffnesses add. This gave estimates of the initial torques of both muscles during cocontraction. 6. The contributions of the two muscles during cocontraction were used to estimate the active joint stiffness that would be expected if the two muscles were activated independently to the same levels as in the cocontraction trials. The stiffness measured at the peak of stretch reflex action during cocontraction trials differed from the sum of the stiffnesses of the two muscles when they were contracting alone. At low cocontraction levels, the measured stiffness was less than expected on the basis of summation of the action of the two muscles, whereas at high cocontraction levels, the measured stiffness was greater than expected. This demonstrates that there is nonlinear stretch reflex interaction. That is, reflex action for a pair of antagonists is not simply the linear sum of the reflex actions of the two muscles acting independently.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

1987 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 525-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. De Luca ◽  
B. Mambrito

1. Myoelectric (ME) activity of several motor units was detected simultaneously from the human flexor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis longus muscles, the only two muscles that control the interphalangeal joint of the thumb. The ME signals were detected while the subjects produced isometric force outputs to track three different paradigms: triangular trajectories, random-force trajectories requiring both flexion and extension contractions, and net zero force resulting from stiffening the joint by voluntarily coactivating both muscles. 2. The ME signals were decomposed into their constituent motor-unit action potential trains. The firing rate behavior of the concurrently active motor units was studied using cross-correlation techniques. 3. During isometric contractions, the firing rates of motor units within a muscle were greatly cross-correlated with essentially zero time shift with respect to each other. This observation confirms our previous report of this behavior, which has been called common drive. Common drive was also found among the motor units of the agonist and antagonist muscles during voluntary coactivation to stiffen the interphalangeal joint. This observation suggests two interesting points: 1) that the common drive mechanism has a component of central origin, and 2) that the central nervous system may control the motoneuron pools of an agonist-antagonist muscle pair as if they were one pool when both are performing the same task. 4. During force reversals, the firing rates of motor units reverse in an orderly manner: earlier recruited motor units decrease their firing rate before later recruited motor units. This orderly reversal of firing rates is consistent with the concept of orderly recruitment and derecruitment. 5. A control scheme is suggested to explain the behavior of the motor units in both muscles during force reversal. It consists of centrally mediated reciprocally organized flexion and extension commands along with a common coactivation command to both muscles. This control scheme allows for coactivation and reciprocal activation of an agonist-antagonist set. 6. The agonist-antagonist pair was observed to generate a net force in two control modalities: proportional activation and reciprocal activation. In proportional activation, the agonist-antagonist set is coactivated during either of two states: when uncertainty exists in the required task or when a compensatory force contraction is perceived to be required.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Author(s):  
Elisabeth van Houts

This book contains an analysis of the experience of married life by men and women in Christian medieval Europe c. 900–1300. The focus will be on the social and emotional life of the married couple rather than on the institutional history of marriage. The book consists of three parts: the first part (Getting Married) is devoted to the process of getting married and wedding celebrations, the second part (Married Life) discusses the married life of lay couples and clergy, their sexuality, and any remarriage, while the third part (Alternative Living) explores concubinage and polygyny as well as the single life in contrast to monogamous sexual unions. Four main themes are central to the book. First, the tension between patriarchal family strategies and the individual family member’s freedom of choice to marry and, if so, to what partner; second, the role played by the married priesthood in their quest to have individual agency and self-determination accepted in their own lives in the face of the growing imposition of clerical celibacy; third, the role played by women in helping society accept some degree of gender equality and self-determination to marry and in shaping the norms for married life incorporating these principles; fourth, the role played by emotion in the establishment of marriage and in married life at a time when sexual and spiritual love feature prominently in medieval literature.


Author(s):  
Xiang Qian Shi ◽  
Ho Lam Heung ◽  
Zhi Qiang Tang ◽  
Kai Yu Tong ◽  
Zheng Li

Stroke has been the leading cause of disability due to the induced spasticity in the upper extremity. The constant flexion of spastic fingers following stroke has not been well described. Accurate measurements for joint stiffness help clinicians have a better access to the level of impairment after stroke. Previously, we conducted a method for quantifying the passive finger joint stiffness based on the pressure-angle relationship between the spastic fingers and the soft-elastic composite actuator (SECA). However, it lacks a ground-truth to demonstrate the compatibility between the SECA-facilitated stiffness estimation and standard joint stiffness quantification procedure. In this study, we compare the passive metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint stiffness measured using the SECA with the results from our designed standalone mechatronics device, which measures the passive metacarpophalangeal joint torque and angle during passive finger rotation. Results obtained from the fitting model that concludes the stiffness characteristic are further compared with the results obtained from SECA-Finger model, as well as the clinical score of Modified Ashworth Scale (MAS) for grading spasticity. These findings suggest the possibility of passive MCP joint stiffness quantification using the soft robotic actuator during the performance of different tasks in hand rehabilitation.


Author(s):  
Jacob Busch ◽  
Emilie Kirstine Madsen ◽  
Antoinette Mary Fage-Butler ◽  
Marianne Kjær ◽  
Loni Ledderer

Summary Nudging has been discussed in the context of public health, and ethical issues raised by nudging in public health contexts have been highlighted. In this article, we first identify types of nudging approaches and techniques that have been used in screening programmes, and ethical issues that have been associated with nudging: paternalism, limited autonomy and manipulation. We then identify nudging techniques used in a pamphlet developed for the Danish National Screening Program for Colorectal Cancer. These include framing, default nudge, use of hassle bias, authority nudge and priming. The pamphlet and the very offering of a screening programme can in themselves be considered nudges. Whether nudging strategies are ethically problematic depend on whether they are categorized as educative- or non-educative nudges. Educative nudges seek to affect people’s choice making by engaging their reflective capabilities. Non-educative nudges work by circumventing people’s reflective capabilities. Information materials are, on the face of it, meant to engage citizens’ reflective capacities. Recipients are likely to receive information materials with this expectation, and thus not expect to be affected in other ways. Non-educative nudges may therefore be particularly problematic in the context of information on screening, also as participating in screening does not always benefit the individual.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 579-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. D. Cosco ◽  
K. Howse ◽  
C. Brayne

The extension of life does not appear to be slowing, representing a great achievement for mankind as well as a challenge for ageing populations. As we move towards an increasingly older population we will need to find novel ways for individuals to make the best of the challenges they face, as the likelihood of encountering some form of adversity increases with age. Resilience theories share a common idea that individuals who manage to navigate adversity and maintain high levels of functioning demonstrate resilience. Traditional models of healthy ageing suggest that having a high level of functioning across a number of domains is a requirement. The addition of adversity to the healthy ageing model via resilience makes this concept much more accessible and more amenable to the ageing population. Through asset-based approaches, such as the invoking of individual, social and environmental resources, it is hoped that greater resilience can be fostered at a population level. Interventions aimed at fostering greater resilience may take many forms; however, there is great potential to increase social and environmental resources through public policy interventions. The wellbeing of the individual must be the focus of these efforts; quality of life is an integral component to the enjoyment of additional years and should not be overlooked. Therefore, it will become increasingly important to use resilience as a public health concept and to intervene through policy to foster greater resilience by increasing resources available to older people. Fostering wellbeing in the face of increasing adversity has significant implications for ageing individuals and society as a whole.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 42-46
Author(s):  
Luiz Eduardo Toledo Avelar

The mandible is the most important bone structure of the facial makeup. Its morphology differs with respect to genetic factors, sexual dimorphism, and age. Among its particular characteristics is the ability to adapt with its counterpart, the base of the skull, conferring a dynamic quality of this bone, by the mechanism of constant remodeling. In order to understand the involvement of the mandible in the evaluation of the lower third of the face, a fractional analysis of its parts is necessary considering morphological parameters of the mandibular angle. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the importance of the mandible as an instrument in the analysis of the lower third of the face, allowing the accomplishment of aesthetic treatment, respecting the individual characteristics.


1996 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 617-621 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. MEHTA ◽  
G. N. MALAVIYA ◽  
S. HUSAIN

Twenty seven opponensplasties for ulnar and median paralysis in 25 leprosy patients were performed using extensor indicis proprius. An additional transfer of the radial half of flexor pollicis longus to extensor pollicis longus was done to stabilize the metacarpophalangeal joint of the thumb. The biomechanical aspects of extensor indicis proprius tendon transfer were studied and results evaluated using various anatomical and functional parameters. Extensor indicis proprius provides adequate strength to position the thumb. However, sometimes it does not reach its new insertion. There is no significant deficit at the donor site but in a few cases the index finger may lose its capability for independent extension and sometimes a proximal interphalangeal joint contracture may develop.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 190-200
Author(s):  
Jasper Doomen

The freedom of the individual can easily come into conflict with his or her obligation to integrate in society. The case of Belcacemi and Oussar v Belgium provides a good example. It is evident that some restrictions of citizens’ freedoms must be accepted for a state to function and, more basically, persist; as a consequence, it is acceptable that certain demands, incorporated in criminal law, are made of citizens. The issue of the extent to which such restrictions are justified has increasingly become a topic of discussion. The present case raises a number of important questions with respect to the right to wear a full-face veil in public if the societal norm is that the face should be visible, the most salient of which are whether women should be ‘protected’ from unequal treatment against their will and to what extent society may impose values on the individual. I will argue that Belgian law places unwarranted restrictions on citizens and that the values behind it testify to an outlook that is difficult to reconcile with the freedom of conscience and religion.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-313
Author(s):  
Claire Farago

Abstract Five interrelated case studies from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries develop the dynamic contrast between portraiture and pictorial genres newly invented in and about Latin America that do not represent their subjects as individuals despite the descriptive focus on the particular. From Jean de Léry’s genre-defining proto-ethnographic text (1578) about the Tupinamba of Brazil to the treatment of the Creole upper class in New Spain as persons whose individuality deserves to be memorialized in contrast to the Mestizaje, African, and Indian underclass objectified as types deserving of scientific study, hierarchical distinctions between portraiture and ethnographic images can be framed in historical terms around the Aristotelian categories of the universal, the individual, and the particular. There are also some intriguing examples that destabilize these inherited distinctions, such as Puerto Rican artist José Campeche’s disturbing and poignant image of a deformed child, Juan Pantaléon Aviles, 1808; and an imaginary portrait of Moctezuma II, c. 1697, based on an ethnographic image, attributed to the leading Mexican painter Antonio Rodriguez. These anomalies serve to focus the study on the hegemonic position accorded to the viewing subject as actually precarious and unstable, always ripe for reinterpretation at the receiving end of European culture.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 46
Author(s):  
Leny Suarni

<strong><em></em></strong><em>Menarche is the first menstruation that usually occurs in the age range of 10-16 years or in early adolescence in the middle of puberty before entering reproduction (Proverawati and Misaroh, 2009). Menarche is the first mestruasi blood expenditure, the arrival of menarche can cause positive or negative reactions, a positive reaction if the individual is able to appreciate, understand and accept menarche as a sign of maturity that is owned by a woman otherwise a negative reaction will cause anxiety. Anxiety is a condition where an individual or group experiences anxiety (judgment or opinion) and autonomic nervous system activity in responding to threats that are unclear, non specific. The purpose of this research is to determine the level of anxiety of adolescents facing menarche in  IT Khalisaturrahmi Binjai, mild anxiety level, moderate anxiety level, severe anxiety level. The type of research used is descriptive. The population in this study amounted to 32 respondents. The sample in this study amounted to 24 respondents with consecutive sampling techniques. The results showed that respondents experienced mild anxiety levels of 12 people (50%), 8 people (33%) moderate anxiety and 4 people (17%) with severe anxiety. From the results of the study it can be concluded that the level of anxiety of adolescents facing menarche in IT Middle School Khalisaturrahmi Binjai majority in the category of mild anxiety levels, amounting to 12 respondents or (50%). Further researchers are advised to conduct research on the handling of anxiety in young women in the face of menarche</em><strong><em></em></strong><em>.</em> <br /><p><strong><em>Keywords: Anxiety, </em></strong><strong>Princess Adolescents<em>, Menarche</em></strong></p>


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