Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man

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Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man. / Petersen, Tue Hvass; Rosenberg, Kasper; Petersen, Nicolas Caesar; Nielsen, Jens Bo.

In: Experimental Brain Research, Vol. 193, No. 2, 2009, p. 161-171.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Petersen, TH, Rosenberg, K, Petersen, NC & Nielsen, JB 2009, 'Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man', Experimental Brain Research, vol. 193, no. 2, pp. 161-171. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6

APA

Petersen, T. H., Rosenberg, K., Petersen, N. C., & Nielsen, J. B. (2009). Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man. Experimental Brain Research, 193(2), 161-171. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6

Vancouver

Petersen TH, Rosenberg K, Petersen NC, Nielsen JB. Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man. Experimental Brain Research. 2009;193(2):161-171. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6

Author

Petersen, Tue Hvass ; Rosenberg, Kasper ; Petersen, Nicolas Caesar ; Nielsen, Jens Bo. / Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man. In: Experimental Brain Research. 2009 ; Vol. 193, No. 2. pp. 161-171.

Bibtex

@article{64aaec40ed5111ddbf70000ea68e967b,
title = "Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man",
abstract = "All movements are accompanied by postural reactions which ensure that the balance of the body is maintained. It has not been resolved that to what extent the primary motor cortex and corticospinal tract are involved in the control of these reactions. Here, we investigated the contribution of the corticospinal tract to the activation of the soleus (SOL) muscle in standing human subjects (n = 10) in relation to voluntary heel raise, anticipatory postural activation of the soleus muscle when the subject pulled a handle and to reflex activation of the soleus muscle when the subject was suddenly pulled forward by an external perturbation. SOL motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) increased significantly in relation to rest -75 ms prior to the onset of EMG in the heel-raise and handle-pull tasks. The short-latency facilitation of the soleus H-reflex evoked by TMS increased similarly, suggesting that the increased MEP size prior to movement was caused at least partly by increased excitability of corticospinal tract cells with monosynaptic projections to SOL motoneurones. Changes in spinal motoneuronal excitability could be ruled out since there was no significant increase of the SOL H-reflex until immediately prior to EMG onset for any of the tasks. Tibialis anterior MEPs were unaltered prior to the onset of SOL EMG activity in the handle-pull task, suggesting that the MEP facilitation was specific for the SOL muscle. No significant increase of the MEPs was observed prior to EMG onset for the external perturbation. These data suggest that the primary motor cortex is involved in activating the SOL muscle as part of an anticipatory postural reaction.",
author = "Petersen, {Tue Hvass} and Kasper Rosenberg and Petersen, {Nicolas Caesar} and Nielsen, {Jens Bo}",
note = "CURIS 2009 5200 010",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6",
language = "English",
volume = "193",
pages = "161--171",
journal = "Experimental Brain Research",
issn = "0014-4819",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cortical involvement in anticipatory postural reactions in man

AU - Petersen, Tue Hvass

AU - Rosenberg, Kasper

AU - Petersen, Nicolas Caesar

AU - Nielsen, Jens Bo

N1 - CURIS 2009 5200 010

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - All movements are accompanied by postural reactions which ensure that the balance of the body is maintained. It has not been resolved that to what extent the primary motor cortex and corticospinal tract are involved in the control of these reactions. Here, we investigated the contribution of the corticospinal tract to the activation of the soleus (SOL) muscle in standing human subjects (n = 10) in relation to voluntary heel raise, anticipatory postural activation of the soleus muscle when the subject pulled a handle and to reflex activation of the soleus muscle when the subject was suddenly pulled forward by an external perturbation. SOL motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) increased significantly in relation to rest -75 ms prior to the onset of EMG in the heel-raise and handle-pull tasks. The short-latency facilitation of the soleus H-reflex evoked by TMS increased similarly, suggesting that the increased MEP size prior to movement was caused at least partly by increased excitability of corticospinal tract cells with monosynaptic projections to SOL motoneurones. Changes in spinal motoneuronal excitability could be ruled out since there was no significant increase of the SOL H-reflex until immediately prior to EMG onset for any of the tasks. Tibialis anterior MEPs were unaltered prior to the onset of SOL EMG activity in the handle-pull task, suggesting that the MEP facilitation was specific for the SOL muscle. No significant increase of the MEPs was observed prior to EMG onset for the external perturbation. These data suggest that the primary motor cortex is involved in activating the SOL muscle as part of an anticipatory postural reaction.

AB - All movements are accompanied by postural reactions which ensure that the balance of the body is maintained. It has not been resolved that to what extent the primary motor cortex and corticospinal tract are involved in the control of these reactions. Here, we investigated the contribution of the corticospinal tract to the activation of the soleus (SOL) muscle in standing human subjects (n = 10) in relation to voluntary heel raise, anticipatory postural activation of the soleus muscle when the subject pulled a handle and to reflex activation of the soleus muscle when the subject was suddenly pulled forward by an external perturbation. SOL motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) increased significantly in relation to rest -75 ms prior to the onset of EMG in the heel-raise and handle-pull tasks. The short-latency facilitation of the soleus H-reflex evoked by TMS increased similarly, suggesting that the increased MEP size prior to movement was caused at least partly by increased excitability of corticospinal tract cells with monosynaptic projections to SOL motoneurones. Changes in spinal motoneuronal excitability could be ruled out since there was no significant increase of the SOL H-reflex until immediately prior to EMG onset for any of the tasks. Tibialis anterior MEPs were unaltered prior to the onset of SOL EMG activity in the handle-pull task, suggesting that the MEP facilitation was specific for the SOL muscle. No significant increase of the MEPs was observed prior to EMG onset for the external perturbation. These data suggest that the primary motor cortex is involved in activating the SOL muscle as part of an anticipatory postural reaction.

U2 - 10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6

DO - 10.1007/s00221-008-1603-6

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18956177

VL - 193

SP - 161

EP - 171

JO - Experimental Brain Research

JF - Experimental Brain Research

SN - 0014-4819

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 9974597