Abstract

Discharge characteristics of 48 receptors of passive muscle spindles during gradual stretching of the soleus muscle were studied in anesthetized cats. The position of the receptor was determined by electrical stimulation of the muscle surface, by pressure on the muscle, by stretching of individual bundles of fibers, by intramuscular electrical stimulation, and also by coagulation of areas of muscle leading to disappearance of discharges of the monitored unit. Primary and secondary endings were found in which dynamic and static sensitivity could be distinguished and were independent of localization. Primary endings with identical functional properties were found in both the proximal and middle parts of the muscle. It is postulated that lower or higher dynamic and static sensitivity of receptors depends not on the location of muscle spindles in the soleus muscle, but on differences in the density of afferent terminal contacts with three types of intrafusal fibers.

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