Abstract

Key points Physiological hand tremor has a clear peak between 6 and 12 Hz, which has been attributed to both neural and resonant causes.A reduction in tremor frequency produced by adding an inertial mass to the limb has usually been taken as a method to identify the resonant component.However, adding mass to a limb also inevitably increases the muscular force required to maintain the limb's position against gravity, so ambiguous results have been reported.Here we measure hand tremor at different levels of gravitational field strength using a human centrifuge, thereby increasing the required muscular force to preserve limb position without changing the limb's inertia.By comparing the effect of added mass (inertia + force) versus solely added force upon hand acceleration, we conclude that tremor frequency can be almost completely explained by a resonant mechanical system. Human physiological hand tremor has a resonant component. Proof of this is that its frequency can be modified by adding mass. However, adding mass also increases the load which must be supported. The necessary force requires muscular contraction which will change motor output and is likely to increase limb stiffness. The increased stiffness will partly offset the effect of the increased mass and this can lead to the erroneous conclusion that factors other than resonance are involved in determining tremor frequency. Using a human centrifuge to increase head‐to‐foot gravitational field strength, we were able to control for the increased effort by increasing force without changing mass. This revealed that the peak frequency of human hand tremor is 99% predictable on the basis of a resonant mechanism. We ask what, if anything, the peak frequency of physiological tremor can reveal about the operation of the nervous system.

Highlights

  • Physiological hand tremor has a very distinct peak in its acceleration spectrum

  • The experiments were approved by the QinetiQ Research Ethics Committee (QREC) and were conducted in accordance with standard human centrifuge operating procedures and the Declaration of Helsinki

  • In this study we are mainly interested in the peak frequency of tremor

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Summary

Introduction

Physiological hand tremor has a very distinct peak in its acceleration spectrum. For 237 subjects, aged from 9 to 91 years, 90% had a peak between 7 and 11 Hz (Lakie, 1994). At least part of the explanation for this is mechanical (Stiles & Randall, 1967; Raethjen et al 2000). The mass of the limb interacts with the elasticity of the muscles and tendons. The joint is less than critically damped so it has a resonant frequency The Journal of Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society

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