Peculiarities of Activation of Muscles of the Shoulder Belt in Voluntary Two-Joint Movements of the Upper Limb

We studied coordination of central motor commands (СMCs) coming to muscles of the shoulder and shoulder belt in the course of single-joint and two-joint movements including flexion and extension of the elbow and shoulder joints. Characteristics of rectified and averaged EMGs recorded from a few musc...

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Published inNeurophysiology (New York) Vol. 41; no. 1; pp. 43 - 50
Main Authors Gorkovenko, A. V, Tal'nov, А. N, Korneev, V. V, Kostyukov, A. I
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Boston Boston : Springer US 01.02.2009
Springer US
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:We studied coordination of central motor commands (СMCs) coming to muscles of the shoulder and shoulder belt in the course of single-joint and two-joint movements including flexion and extension of the elbow and shoulder joints. Characteristics of rectified and averaged EMGs recorded from a few muscles of the upper limb were considered correlates of the CMC parameters. Special attention was paid to coordination of CMCs coming to two-joint muscles that are able to function as common flexors (m. biceps brachii, caput breve, BBcb) and common extensors (m. triceps brachii, caput longum, TBcl) of the elbow and shoulder joints. Upper limb movements used in the tests included planar shifts of the arm from one spatial point to another resulting from either simultaneous changes in the angles of the shoulder and elbow joints or isolated sequential (two-stage) changes in these joint angles. As was found, shoulder muscles providing movements of the elbow with changes in the angle of the elbow joint, i.e., BBcb and TBcl, were also intensely involved in the performance of single-joint movements in the shoulder joint. The CMCs coming to two-joint muscles in the course of two-joint movements appeared, in the first approximation, as sums of the commands received by these muscles in the course of corresponding single-joint movements in the elbow and shoulder joints. Therefore, if we interpret the isolated forearm movement performed due to a change in the angle of the elbow joint as the main motor event, while the shoulder movement is considered the accessory one, we can conclude that realization of a two-joint movement of the upper-limb distal part is based on superposition of CMCs related to basic movements (main and accessory).
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11062-009-9075-2
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 23
ISSN:0090-2977
1573-9007
DOI:10.1007/s11062-009-9075-2