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  • Fusimotor neurones  (1)
  • Human fetus  (1)
  • Muscles spindles  (1)
  • 1985-1989  (2)
  • 1965-1969
Document type
Publisher
Years
Year
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Surgical and radiologic anatomy 11 (1989), S. 265-270 
    ISSN: 1279-8517
    Keywords: Diaphragm ; Arterial supply ; Diaphragmatic hernia ; Human fetus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Afin de comprendre le développement du diaphragme chez l'homme, l'étude de la vascularisation artérielle a été réalisée chez 20 fœtus frais. L'injection artérielle de Micropaque a été effectuée soit par voie ascendante dans l'aorte thoracique, soit par voie descendante dans l'a. carotide interne gauche en aval du canal artériel. Une étude par diaphanisation a permis de mieux individualiser les anastomoses entre les vaisseaux diaphragmatiques. Il semblerait que les a. diaphragmatiques inférieures et intercostales jouent un rôle essentiel dans l'organogenèse de ce muscle complexe.
    Notes: Summary To gain a better understanding of the development of the human diaphragm, a study of the arterial supply was made in 20 fetuses. The Micropaque injection was injected either by an ascending route in the thoracic aorta or by a descending route in the left internal carotid below the ductus arteriosus. Two studies using diaphanization have displayed the diaphragmatic anastomoses. The phrenic and the intercostal a. seemed the most important to explain the diaphragm organogenesis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Fusimotor neurones ; Muscles spindles ; Muscular afferences ; Locomotion ; Thalamic cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The firing patterns of α and γ efferent fibres and of group I and group II afferent fibres innervating the gastrocnemius muscle were observed during spontaneous locomotor movements in the thalamic cat. Multi-unit discharges of each kind of fibre were obtained by electronic sorting of the action potentials from the whole activity of a thin branch of gastrocnemius lateralis or medialis nerve. The main results were: (1) During the locomotor cycle the activity of the afferent and efferent populations was highly modulated. (2) α- and γ-motoneurones were co-activated within the locomotor cycle during ankle plantar-flexion. The γ discharge began to rise earlier and to fall later than did the α discharge. The amplitude of the γ discharge, unlike that of the α discharge, was largely independent of the vigour of walking. Between the cyclic discharges, most of γ populations were tonically active whereas α populations were silent. Subgroups of the α and γ populations were not usually activated according to the cell-size principle, but, the activation of the latest γ subgroup always preceded that of the earliest α subgroup. (3) Modulation of the group I and II afferent discharges was closely related to the cyclic length changes of the parent muscle. Fusimotor activation during the active shortening of gastrocnemius muscle prevented the afferent discharges from pausing. (4) The pattern of afferent and efferent activity during selective curarisation of the extrafusal junctions indicated that the discharge of static γ-motoneurones is modulated during the locomotor cycle. After curarisation of both extrafusal and intrafusal junctions, an efferent-discharge pattern of central origin persisted alternately in extensor- and flexor-muscle nerves (fictive locomotion). The durations of the fictive locomotor cycle and of the cyclic discharge in the sartorius nerve were increased as a consequence of the suppression of phasic afferent inputs to the C.N.S. (5) Maintained ankle dorsi-flexion slowed the fictive locomotor rhythm and elicited opposite effects, respectively excitation and depression, on the magnitude of the α and γ discharges. Maintained ankle plantar-flexion scarcely perturbed the duration of the fictive locomotor cycle, but the duration of the sartoriusnerve discharge lengthened at the expense of that of the gastrocnemius discharge. Both gastrocnemius α-and γ-motoneurones were depressed, the former considerably more than the latter. (6) The roles of the gastrocnemius afferents and γ-efferents during the locomotor cycle are discussed in the light of these results.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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