Abstract

Plantar cutaneous afferent transmission is critical for recovery of locomotion in spinalized animals, whereas a phase-dependent reflex modulation is apparent during fictive or real locomotion. In nine people with a chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) the effects of foot sole stimulation on the soleus H-reflex and tibialis anterior (TA) flexion reflex modulation patterns during assisted stepping were established on different days. The soleus H-reflex was elicited by posterior tibial nerve stimulation followed by a supramaximal stimulus 100 ms after the test H-reflex to control for movement of recording electrodes. The flexion reflex was evoked by sural nerve stimulation with a 30-ms pulse train, recorded from the ipsilateral TA muscle, and elicited at 1.2- to twofold the reflex threshold. During assisted stepping, spinal reflexes were conditioned by percutaneous stimulation of the ipsilateral metatarsals at threefold perceptual threshold with a 20-ms pulse train delivered at 9- to 11-ms conditioning-test intervals. Stimuli were randomly dispersed across the step cycle, which was divided into 16 equal bins. The conditioned soleus H-reflex was significantly facilitated at midstance and depressed during midswing when compared with the unconditioned soleus H-reflex recorded during stepping. Foot sole stimulation induced a significant facilitation of the long-latency TA flexion reflex before, during, and after stance-to-swing transition when compared with the unconditioned long-latency TA flexion reflex during stepping. This study provides evidence that plantar cutaneous afferents remarkably influence the soleus H-reflex and TA flexion reflex modulation patterns during stepping and support that actions of plantar cutaneous afferents onto spinal interneuronal circuits engaged in locomotion are manifested in a phase-dependent manner in chronic SCI subjects.

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