
Reversal of the reflex effect of an afferent nerve by altering the character of the electrical stimulus applied
Publication year - 1911
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london. series b, containing papers of a biological character
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9185
pISSN - 0950-1193
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.1911.0026
Subject(s) - reflex , stimulation , stimulus (psychology) , afferent , ankle jerk reflex , hindlimb , h reflex , anatomy , muscle contraction , neuroscience , triceps reflex , contraction (grammar) , medicine , anesthesia , withdrawal reflex , psychology , psychotherapist
Stimulation of an afferent limb-nerve in the decerebrate or decapitate mammal (cat, dog) gives as its reflex result flexion of that limb; during this flexion the pure extensor muscles of the limb relax under central inhibition. In the hind limb this reflex effect is observable in the isolated vasto-crureus, the main extensor muscle of the knee; that muscle if engaged in contraction relaxes when the afferent nerve is stimulated. Its elongation is the sign of the central inhibition which takes place. If the reflex stimulation be strong the muscle relaxes quickly and greatly; if the stimulation be weak the relaxation is slower and less ample. These results are easily demonstrable by using as a stimulus either faradism or mechanical stimulation such as ligation of the central stump of the afferent nerve. Usual and uniform as this result is, we find it possible in the decerebrate preparation under certain conditions to obtain reflex contraction of vastocrureus as well as reflex inhibition, and to elicit the contraction through the same afferent nerves as under other conditions so regularly elicit inhibition. The condition influencing the nature of the reflex result in this respect are (1) the strength and (2) the form of the electrical stimulus applied to the afferent nerve, and (3) the reflex state obtaining in the preparation at the time.