Abstract

To probe the frequency characteristics of somatosensory responses in the triceps surae muscles, we previously applied suprathreshold noisy vibration to the Achilles tendon and correlated it with ongoing triceps surae muscle activity (recorded via surface EMG) during standing. Stronger responses to tendon stimuli were observed in soleus (Sol) relative to medial gastrocnemius (MGas) surface EMG; however, it is unknown whether differences in motor unit activity or limitations of surface EMG could have influenced this finding. Here, we inserted indwelling EMG into Sol and MGas to record the activity of single motor units while we applied noisy vibration (10-115 Hz) to the right Achilles tendon of standing participants. We analyzed the relationship between vibration acceleration and the spike activity of active single motor units through estimates of coherence, gain, phase, and cross-covariance. We also applied sinusoidal vibration at frequencies from 10 to 100 Hz (in 5-Hz increments) to examine whether motor units demonstrate nonlinear synchronization or phase locking at higher frequencies. Relative to MGas single motor units, Sol units demonstrated stronger coherence and higher gain with noisy vibration across a bandwidth of 7-68 Hz, and larger peak-to-peak cross-covariance at all four stimulus amplitudes examined. Sol and MGas motor unit activity was modulated over the time course of the sinusoidal stimuli across all frequencies, but their phase-locking behavior was minimal. These findings suggest Sol plays a prominent role in responding to disturbances transmitted through the Achilles tendon across a broad frequency band during standing.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We examined the relationship between Achilles tendon stimuli and spike times of single soleus (Sol) and medial gastrocnemius (MGas) motor units during standing. Relative to MGas, Sol units demonstrated stronger coherence and higher gain with noisy stimuli across a bandwidth of 7-68 Hz. Sol and MGas units demonstrated minimal nonlinear phase locking with sinusoidal stimuli. These findings indicate Sol plays a prominent role in responding to tendon stimuli across a broad frequency band.

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