论文标题
人类电机单元的人口记录经常显示“洋葱皮肤”排放模式 - 对自愿电机控制的影响
Population recordings of human motor units often display 'onion skin' discharge patterns -- implications for voluntary motor control
论文作者
论文摘要
在过去的二十年中,我们从表面肌电图(EMG)中提取有用的生物学信号的能力进行了根本性转化。 EMG电极设计和信号处理技术的进步导致了从肌肉表面识别运动单元尖峰火车的非凡能力。这些EMG网格或高密度表面EMG(HDSEMG)的录音现在可以在等轴测收缩期间同时提供多达20-30个运动单元尖峰的精确描述,即使在高力也是如此。这种多单元录音通常显示出一种称为洋葱皮肤行为的意外特征,其中多个电机单元尖峰列车基本上是平行的,并且有组织的出院速率增加,随着自愿力的增加,最早的招聘单元达到了最高的排放率,而较高的阈值单位则显示出更高的适度率。该序列导致有序的排放模式,类似于洋葱的层,其中放电速率轨迹在很大程度上保持平行且很少交叉。我们在这篇综述中的目标是解释为什么这种排放速率是出乎意料的,为什么它不能准确反映我们当前对运动神经元电生理学的理解,以及为什么它可能导致肌肉力量产生无预测的破坏。这篇综述针对的是临床医生或临床医生。将提供针对研究科学家的洋葱皮肤特征相关的潜在电生理机制的更先进的描述作为参考材料。
Over the past two decades, there has been a radical transformation in our ability to extract useful biological signals from the surface electromyogram (EMG). Advances in EMG electrode design and signal processing techniques have resulted in an extraordinary capacity to identify motor unit spike trains from the surface of a muscle. These EMG grid, or high-density surface EMG (HDsEMG), recordings now provide accurate depictions of as many as 20-30 motor unit spike trains simultaneously during isometric contractions, even at high forces. Such multi-unit recordings often display an unexpected feature known as onion skin behavior, in which multiple motor unit spike trains show essentially parallel and organized increases in discharge rate with increases in voluntary force, such that the earliest recruited units reach the highest discharge rates, while higher threshold units display more modest rate increases. This sequence results in an orderly pattern of discharge resembling the layers of an onion, in which discharge rate trajectories stay largely parallel and rarely cross. Our objective in this review is to explain why this pattern of discharge rates is unexpected, why it does not accurately reflect our current understanding of motoneuron electrophysiology, and why it may potentially lead to unpredicted disruption in muscle force generation. This review is aimed at the practicing clinician, or the clinician scientist. More advanced descriptions of potential electrophysiological mechanisms associated with onion skin characteristics targeting the research scientist will be provided as reference material.