Plastic changes in the human H-reflex pathway at rest following skillful cycling training.

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Plastic changes in the human H-reflex pathway at rest following skillful cycling training. / Mazzocchio, Riccardo; Kitago, Tomoko; Liuzzi, Gianpiero; Wolpaw, Jonathan R; Cohen, Leonardo G.

in: CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL, Jahrgang 117, Nr. 8, 8, 2006, S. 1682-1691.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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Mazzocchio R, Kitago T, Liuzzi G, Wolpaw JR, Cohen LG. Plastic changes in the human H-reflex pathway at rest following skillful cycling training. CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL. 2006;117(8):1682-1691. 8.

Bibtex

@article{9105363f314641fd8aa02091b03a763d,
title = "Plastic changes in the human H-reflex pathway at rest following skillful cycling training.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: The spinal cord is capable of activity-dependent plasticity, but the extent of its participation in human motor learning is not known. Here, we tested the hypothesis that acquisition of a locomotor-related skill modulates the pathway of the H-reflex, a measure of spinal cord excitability that is susceptible to plastic changes. METHODS: Subjects were tested on their ability to establish a constant cycling speed on a recumbent bike despite frequent changes in pedal resistance. The coefficient of variation of speed (CV(speed)) measured their ability to acquire this skill (decreasing CV(speed) with training reflects performance improvements). Soleus H-reflexes were taken at rest before and after cycling. RESULTS: Ability to establish a target speed increased and H-reflex size decreased more after cycling training involving frequent changes in pedal resistance that required calibrated locomotor compensatory action than with training involving constant pedal resistances and lesser compensation. The degree of performance improvement correlated with the reduction in the amplitude of the H-reflex. CONCLUSIONS: Skillful establishment of a constant cycling speed despite changing pedal resistances is associated with persistent modulation of activity in spinal pathways. SIGNIFICANCE: Recalibration of activity in the H-reflex pathway may be part of the control strategy required for locomotor-related skill acquisition.",
author = "Riccardo Mazzocchio and Tomoko Kitago and Gianpiero Liuzzi and Wolpaw, {Jonathan R} and Cohen, {Leonardo G}",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "117",
pages = "1682--1691",
journal = "CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL",
issn = "1388-2457",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plastic changes in the human H-reflex pathway at rest following skillful cycling training.

AU - Mazzocchio, Riccardo

AU - Kitago, Tomoko

AU - Liuzzi, Gianpiero

AU - Wolpaw, Jonathan R

AU - Cohen, Leonardo G

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - OBJECTIVE: The spinal cord is capable of activity-dependent plasticity, but the extent of its participation in human motor learning is not known. Here, we tested the hypothesis that acquisition of a locomotor-related skill modulates the pathway of the H-reflex, a measure of spinal cord excitability that is susceptible to plastic changes. METHODS: Subjects were tested on their ability to establish a constant cycling speed on a recumbent bike despite frequent changes in pedal resistance. The coefficient of variation of speed (CV(speed)) measured their ability to acquire this skill (decreasing CV(speed) with training reflects performance improvements). Soleus H-reflexes were taken at rest before and after cycling. RESULTS: Ability to establish a target speed increased and H-reflex size decreased more after cycling training involving frequent changes in pedal resistance that required calibrated locomotor compensatory action than with training involving constant pedal resistances and lesser compensation. The degree of performance improvement correlated with the reduction in the amplitude of the H-reflex. CONCLUSIONS: Skillful establishment of a constant cycling speed despite changing pedal resistances is associated with persistent modulation of activity in spinal pathways. SIGNIFICANCE: Recalibration of activity in the H-reflex pathway may be part of the control strategy required for locomotor-related skill acquisition.

AB - OBJECTIVE: The spinal cord is capable of activity-dependent plasticity, but the extent of its participation in human motor learning is not known. Here, we tested the hypothesis that acquisition of a locomotor-related skill modulates the pathway of the H-reflex, a measure of spinal cord excitability that is susceptible to plastic changes. METHODS: Subjects were tested on their ability to establish a constant cycling speed on a recumbent bike despite frequent changes in pedal resistance. The coefficient of variation of speed (CV(speed)) measured their ability to acquire this skill (decreasing CV(speed) with training reflects performance improvements). Soleus H-reflexes were taken at rest before and after cycling. RESULTS: Ability to establish a target speed increased and H-reflex size decreased more after cycling training involving frequent changes in pedal resistance that required calibrated locomotor compensatory action than with training involving constant pedal resistances and lesser compensation. The degree of performance improvement correlated with the reduction in the amplitude of the H-reflex. CONCLUSIONS: Skillful establishment of a constant cycling speed despite changing pedal resistances is associated with persistent modulation of activity in spinal pathways. SIGNIFICANCE: Recalibration of activity in the H-reflex pathway may be part of the control strategy required for locomotor-related skill acquisition.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 117

SP - 1682

EP - 1691

JO - CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL

JF - CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL

SN - 1388-2457

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -