Maintained volitional activation of the muscle alters the cortical processing of proprioceptive afference from the ankle joint
Giangrande, A., Mujunen, T., Luigi, C. G., Botter, A., & Piitulainen, H. (2024). Maintained volitional activation of the muscle alters the cortical processing of proprioceptive afference from the ankle joint. Neuroscience, 560, 314-325. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2024.09.049
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NeuroscienceAuthors
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2024Copyright
© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of International Brain Research Organization (IBRO).
Cortical proprioceptive processing of intermittent, passive movements can be assessed by extracting evoked and induced electroencephalographic (EEG) responses to somatosensory stimuli. Although the existent prior research on somatosensory stimulations, it remains unknown to what extent ongoing volitional muscle activation modulates the proprioceptive cortical processing of passive ankle-joint rotations. Twenty-five healthy volunteers (28.8 ± 7 yr, 14 males) underwent a total of 100 right ankle-joint passive rotations (4° dorsiflexions, 4 ± 0.25 s inter-stimulus interval, 30°/s peak angular velocity) evoked by a movement actuator during passive condition with relaxed ankle and active condition with a constant plantarflexion torque of 5 ± 2.5 Nm. Simultaneously, EEG, electromyographic (EMG) and kinematic signals were collected. Spatiotemporal features of evoked and induced EEG responses to the stimuli were extracted to estimate the modulation of the cortical proprioceptive processing between the active and passive conditions. Proprioceptive stimuli during the active condition elicited robustly ∼26 % larger evoked response and ∼38 % larger beta suppression amplitudes, but ∼42 % weaker beta rebound amplitude over the primary sensorimotor cortex than the passive condition, with no differences in terms of response latencies. These findings indicate that the active volitional motor task during naturalistic proprioceptive stimulation of the ankle joint enhances related cortical activation and reduces related cortical inhibition with respect to the passive condition. Possible factors explaining these results include mechanisms occurring at several levels of the proprioceptive processing from the peripheral muscle (i.e. mechanical, muscle spindle status, etc.) to the different central (i.e. spinal, sub-cortical and cortical) levels.
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Research Council of FinlandFunding program(s)
Research profiles, AoF; Research costs of Academy Research Fellow, AoFAdditional information about funding
This study was supported by the Academy of Finland (grants #296240 and #327288) to HP, Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation (602.274) to HP, and “Brain changes across the life-span” profiling funding to University of Jyväskylä (grant #311877). The study was supported also by a three-years PhD scholarship from Politecnico di Torino, Turin to AG.License
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