Abstract

The C3–C4 propriospinal system is an important pathway mediating movement in cats; it contributes to movements in primates (including humans), and may have a role in recovery after lesion. Validated clinical tests of this system would find many applications, therefore we sought to test whether non-monosynaptic homonymous facilitation of the forearm flexor H reflex is mediated solely via a C3–C4 propriospinal pathway. In one anesthetized macaque monkey, median nerve stimulation elicited an H reflex in the flexor carpi radialis (FCR). Median nerve conditioning stimuli at sub-threshold intensities facilitated the H reflex, for inter-stimulus intervals up to 30 ms. Successive spinal surgical hemisections were then made. C2 lesion left the homonymous facilitation intact, suggesting mediation by spinal, not supraspinal pathways. Facilitation also remained after a second lesion at C5, indicating a major role for segmental (C7–C8) rather than propriospinal (C3–C4) interneurons. In separate experiments in five healthy human subjects, a threshold tracking approach assessed changes in peripheral axon excitability after conditioning stimulation. This was found to be enhanced up to 20 ms after the conditioning stimulus, and could partly, although not completely, underlie the H reflex facilitation seen. We conclude that homonymous facilitation of the H reflex in FCR can be produced by segmental spinal mechanisms, as well as by a supranormal period of nerve excitability. Unfortunately, this straightforward test cannot therefore be used for selective assessment of propriospinal circuits.

Highlights

  • Motor commands can arrive at spinal motoneurones via a range of descending pathways

  • Our findings reveal that mechanisms other than C3–C4 propriospinal interneurons can generate homonymous H reflex facilitation, and that this cannot be used as a definitive measure of propriospinal function

  • We designed this study to probe whether homonymous facilitation of upper limb H reflexes in non-human primates and humans is mediated by the C3–4 propriospinal system

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Summary

Introduction

Motor commands can arrive at spinal motoneurones via a range of descending pathways. The corticospinal tract (CST) dominates, other supraspinal and spinal structures can contribute significantly to movement. Such multiplicity offers the potential to sub-serve some motor recovery following damage to the CST (Lawrence and Kuypers, 1968; Zaaimi et al, 2012). One pathway whose functional importance was initially controversial in humans is the C3–C4 propriospinal system. This projection was first described comprehensively in cat.

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