Abstract

Soleus H-reflex facilitation evoked by a supramaximal conditioning stimulation to the femoral nerve was investigated in 28 healthy control subjects and 35 spastic patients of whom 17 were paraplegics with bilateral spinal cord lesion and 18 were hemiplegics with unilateral cerebral lesion. Heteronymous facilitation from quadriceps to soleus was measured 0.4 ms after onset, while the monosynaptic Ia excitation is still uncontaminated by any non-monosynaptic effect and can be used to assess ongoing presynaptic inhibition on Ia terminals to soleus motor neurons. In paralegics, this heteronymous Ia facilitation was significantly larger than in control subjects (all individual results in these patients being above the mean observed in controls). This must reflect a decrease in presynaptic inhibition of Ia terminals in the paraplegics explored here. There was no correlation between this decreased presynaptic inhibition of Ia terminals and the degree of spasticity measured by Ashworth's scale. Surprisingly, the amount of heteronymous Ia facilitation in hemiplegics was the same as in normal subjects. This indicates that presynaptic inhibition of Ia terminals is unchanged in these patients and disagrees with the usual interpretation of reduced vibratory inhibition of the soleus H-reflex in hemiplegics. It is argued that this disagreement is due to the fact that vibratory inhibition of the reflex also depends on post-activation depression following repetitive synaptic transmission.

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