Effects of conditioning cutaneomuscular stimulation on the soleus H-reflex in normal and spastic paretic subjects during walking and standing

1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (5) ◽  
pp. 2090-2104 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Fung ◽  
H. Barbeau

1. The modulation of the soleus H-reflex by a conditioning cutaneomuscular stimulation was investigated in 10 normal and 10 spastic paretic subjects who suffered from incomplete spinal cord lesions. The different motor tasks examined were standing, locomotion, and the maintenance of static limb postures to mimic critical gait events. The test soleus H-reflex was obtained by stimulating the tibial nerve in the popliteal fossa with a single 1-ms pulse at an intensity that produced a barely detectable M wave. The conditioning stimulus, consisting of an 11-ms train of three 1-ms pulses at 200 Hz, was delivered to the ipsilateral medial plantar arch, stimulating predominantly the medial plantar nerve, at an innocuous intensity of 2.5–3.0 X sensory threshold and at a conditioning-test delay of 45 ms. 2. During quiet standing, the H-reflex amplitude was inhibited only marginally by the conditioning cutaneomuscular stimulation, not reaching statistical significance in either the normal or spastic group of subjects. Although there was a trend of reflex inhibition in the normal subjects as the conditioning intensity was increased, a reversed trend of reflex facilitation was observed in the spastic patients. 3. During treadmill walking, the conditioned H-reflex was inhibited significantly during all phases in all the normal subjects and in one mildly impaired patient. In the moderately and severely impaired patients, cutaneomuscular stimulation selectively inhibited the soleus H-reflex in the early stance and swing phases, thereby producing a near normal phasic modulation pattern. Such modulatory effects were not present under static gait-mimicking conditions. 4. The task-specific and phase-dependent effects of cutaneomuscular stimulation on the soleus H-reflex in the spinal cord-injured patients revealed strong inhibitory influence on Ia afferents from cutaneomuscular inputs. It is plausible that inhibition occurs at both pre- and postsynaptic levels. 5. It is concluded that normal Ia modulatory mechanisms during locomotion are deficient in spastic spinal cord-injured patients and can partially and artificially be restored by cutaneomuscular stimulation applied to the sole of the foot. This can be used as a functional electrical stimulation (FES) regime in gait rehabilitation.

Neurosurgery ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 562-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maureen Raffensperger ◽  
Donald H. York

Abstract This study examined the effects of ice water caloric stimulation on H-reflex amplitude in normal subjects and three complete spinal cord-injured patients. H-reflexes were obtained by stimulating the tibial nerve at the popliteal fossa and recording the H-response from the gastrocnemius muscle. All normal subjects who experienced nystagmus or vertigo demonstrated significant augmentation in H-reflex amplitude with ice water irrigation of the ear canal. In the three spinal cord-injured patients, there was no significant change of H-reflex with the ice water stimulus. The results suggest that descending tracts in the anterior spinal cord must be functional to demonstrate caloric augmentation of H-reflexes. In patients with spinal cord injury, it may be possible to predict the recovery of motor function using this test together with other clinical signs of neurological function.


1982 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 111-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
R J Minns ◽  
R A Sutton

Pressure between the ischium and the flat surface of a pressure sensitive device (pedobarograph) are reported. There are no consistent patterns of the pressures detected this way with age, weight, sex or gross anatomy. When sitting on a gel cushion or 3 in foam cushion, the centre of load moves anteriorly and the pressures between the under surface of the cushion and the flat surface of the pedobarograph appear to be both similar and considerably lower than those pressures detected between the ischium and the flat surface. In spinal cord injured patients with pressure sores, the device indicated areas of high pressures (greater than 300 mm Hg) in the region of the pressure sores as well as a very much reduced contact area (usually less than a third) compared with normal subjects of similar weight.


1999 ◽  
Vol 127 (4) ◽  
pp. 382-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Davey ◽  
Hazel C. Smith ◽  
Gordana Savic ◽  
David W. Maskill ◽  
Peter H. Ellaway ◽  
...  

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