Abstract
The structure of the tendon organs was studied in the shank muscles of adult rats both under the light- and electron-microscope. The rat tendon organs measure on the average about 500 μm in length and 60 μm in diameter. Most tendon organs are surrounded by muscle fibres and their short individual tendons and insert into the aponeuroses or intramuscular tendons. Each tendon organ consists of a neurotendinous core composed of collagen bundles that represent tendons of 5–10 muscle fibres; it is innervated by a Ib sensory fibre that branches and terminates among the loose collagen fascicles of the core. Sensory terminals are oriented both transversely and longitudinally. Their position and relation to collagen bundles indicate that, during tendon organ activation, the terminals are probably depolarized both by lateral compression and elongation. The core is enclosed in a capsule that consists of about 5 lamellar layers of capsular cells and closely resembles the perineurium. The majority of the tendon organs also comprise a purely tendinous compartment in the lumen or within the capsular wall. These tendinous components remain separated from the neurotendinous core and do not come into contact with axon terminals. The collagen fibrils of the tendinous compartments are densely packed and larger in diameter than those of the neurotendinous core. The sensory terminals of the tendon organ lie in series with those muscle fibres and collagen bundles that constitute the neurotendinous core, but they are in parallel with the purely tendinous tendon organ components and their respective muscle fibres. Thus, one tendon organ may comprise both in series and in parallel components, which is apparently reflected in its function. It is suggested that the purely tendinous tendon organ compartments account for the in-parallel effects upon the function of tendon organs described in some recent electrophysiological studies.
Published Version
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