Abstract
Coordinated arm and leg movements imply neural interactions between the rhythmic generators of the upper and lower extremities. In ten healthy subjects in the lying position, activity of the muscles of the upper and lower extremities was recorded during separate and joint cyclic movements of the arms and legs with different phase relationships between the movements of the limbs and under various conditions of the motor task. Antiphase active arm movements were characterized by higher muscle activity than during the inphase mode. The muscle activity during passive arm movements imposed by the experimentalist was significantly lower than muscle activity during passive arm movements imposed by the other arm. When loading one arm, the muscle activity in the other, passively moving, arm increased independently from the synergy of arm movements. During a motor task implementing joint antiphase movements of both upper and lower extremities, compared to a motor task implementing their joint in-phase movements, we observed a significant increase in activity in the biceps brahii muscle, the tibialis anterior muscle, and the biceps femoris muscle. Loading of arms in these motor tasks has been accompanied by increased activity in some leg muscles. An increase in the frequency of rhythmic movements resulted in a significant growth of the muscle activity of the arms and legs during their cooperative movements with a greater rate of rise in the flexor muscle activity of the arms and legs during joint antiphase movements. Thus, both the spatial organization of movements and the type of afferent influences are significant factors of interlimb interactions, which, in turn, determine the type of neural interconnections that are involved in movement regulation.
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Original Russian Text © V.A. Selionov, I.A. Solopova, D.S. Zhvansky, A.A. Grishin, 2014, published in Fiziologiya Cheloveka, 2014, Vol. 40, No. 4, pp. 65–77.
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Selionov, V.A., Solopova, I.A., Zhvansky, D.S. et al. Interlimb interactions during cyclic in-phase and antiphase movements of arms and legs and their dependence on afferent influences. Hum Physiol 40, 410–421 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1134/S0362119714040136
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0362119714040136