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Tonic muscle pain does not increase fusimotor drive to human leg muscles: Implications for chronic muscle pain

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:18 authored by Azharuddin FazalbhoyAzharuddin Fazalbhoy, Vaughan Macefield, Ingvars Birznieks
Experimental pain induced in animals has shown that noxious stimulation of group III and IV afferents increases the firing of muscle spindles via a reflex excitation of fusimotor (γ) motoneurones. Chronic muscle pain has been hypothesized to develop as a result of a vicious cycle involving this mechanism. In order to explore the effects of long-lasting muscle pain on the fusimotor system, single unit muscle spindle afferents were recorded from 15 subjects. Afferent activity was recorded from foot and ankle extensor muscles whilst infusing hypertonic saline into the tibialis anterior muscle of the ipsilateral leg, producing moderate-strong pain lasting for ∼60 min. A change in fusimotor drive was inferred by observing changes in the mean discharge rate of spontaneously active muscle spindle afferents. Homonymous and heteronymous muscles remained relaxed and showed no increase in activity, arguing against any fusimotor-driven increase in motor activity, and there was no net change in the firing of muscle spindle afferents. We conclude that long-lasting stimulation of group III and IV afferents fails to excite fusimotor neurones and increase muscle spindle discharge. Accordingly, the vicious cycle theory has no functional basis for the development of myalgia in human subjects.

History

Journal

Experimental Physiology

Volume

98

Issue

6

Start page

1125

End page

1132

Total pages

8

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 The Authors

Former Identifier

2006054901

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-08-25

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