Abstract

The knee jerk was elicited during regular firing of relatively low-threshold motor units of the biceps femoris muscle (during weak voluntary contraction). Besides the reflex response of the rectus femoris muscle, synchronous discharges of motor units of the biceps femoris muscle and activation of new motor units also were observed. Poststimulus histograms and statistical analysis of interspike intervals of motor units of the biceps femoris muscle revealed well-marked excitatory influences synchronous with the reflex response of the rectus femoris. This result can be explained by the presence of excitatory inputs of Ia afferents on motoneurons of the antagonist muscle. In the knee jerk, excitation of motoneurons of the antagonist was followed by later inhibitory influences which evidently correspond to the "silent period" of motoneurons of the agonist muscle during the elicitation of its tendon reflex.

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