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      The irrelevance of fusimotor activity to the Achilles tendon jerk of relaxed humans.

      Annals of Neurology
      Achilles Tendon, innervation, Adult, Afferent Pathways, physiology, Electromyography, Evoked Potentials, drug effects, Humans, Lidocaine, pharmacology, Muscle Spindles, Muscles, Reflex, Stretch, Sciatic Nerve

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          Abstract

          In two normal subjects the sciatic nerve was blocked completely using concentrated lidocaine. The muscle afferent and reflex electromyographic responses to reproducible percussion of the Achilles tendon were recorded while the blocks developed. The intensity of percussion was sufficient to produce an Achilles tendon jerk in one subject when at rest and in the other during reinforcement. The block did not alter the muscle afferent response to tendon percussion in either subject. It is concluded that background fusimotor activity is not a prerequisite for the tendon jerk and that, during complete relaxation, there may be no significant fusimotor drive directed to the triceps surae. The varying ease with which tendon jerks can be elicited in different normal subjects or in different muscles of the same subject appears to be related not to fusimotor activity but to differences in the "central excitability state."

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