AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how different areas of the foot sole affect muscle reflexes in the tibialis anterior (TA) during walking, finding that the reflexes change from facilitation to suppression throughout the walking phase.
  • The study revealed that stimulation of the medial and lateral parts of the forefoot enhances reflexes during specific walking phases, but stimulation at the heel leads to suppression as the foot prepares to strike the ground.
  • Overall, the findings indicate that the reflex reversals in the TA muscle during walking depend on specific pathways triggered by different areas of the foot sole's nerve endings.

Article Abstract

During walking, cutaneous reflexes in ankle flexor muscle [tibialis anterior (TA)] evoked by tibial nerve (TIB) stimulation are predominantly facilitatory at early swing phase but reverse to suppression at late swing phase. Although the TIB innervates a large portion of the skin of the foot sole, the extent to which specific foot-sole regions contribute to the reflex reversals during walking remains unclear. Therefore, we investigated regional cutaneous contributions from discrete portions of the foot sole on reflex reversal in TA following TIB stimulation during walking. Summation effects on reflex amplitudes, when applying combined stimulation from foot-sole regions with TIB, were examined. Middle latency responses (MLRs; 70-120 ms) after TIB stimulation were strongly facilitated during the late stance to mid-swing phases and reversed to suppression just before heel (HL) strike. Both forefoot-medial (f-M) and forefoot-lateral stimulation in the foot sole induced facilitation during stance-to-swing transition phases, but HL stimulation evoked suppression during the late stance to the end of swing phases. At the stance-to-swing transition, a summation of MLR amplitude occurred only for combined f-M&TIB stimulation. However, the same was not true for the combined HL&TIB stimulation. At the swing-to-stance transition, there was a suppressive reflex summation only for HL&TIB stimulation. In contrast, this summation was not observed for the f-M&TIB stimulation. Our results suggest that reflex reversals evoked by TIB stimulation arise from distinct reflex pathways to TA produced by separate afferent populations innervating specific regions of the foot sole.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4961762PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.01011.2015DOI Listing

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