Motor unit discharge properties of the vastii muscles and their modulation with contraction level depend on the knee-joint angle

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Abstract

This study examined the effect of the knee-joint angle on motor unit (MU) discharge properties of the vastii muscles and their modulation with contraction level. Twelve young adults performed unilateral isometric knee-extension contractions during three experimental sessions at either 25, 55, and 85° of knee flexion (full extension: 0°) in a randomised order. Each session involved maximal voluntary contractions (MVCs) followed by submaximal trapezoidal and triangular contractions at different levels relative to maximal voluntary torque (MVT). High-density surface electromyograms were recorded from vastus lateralis and medialis muscles and, subsequently, decomposed to obtain discharge timings of individual MUs. MVT was the greatest, whereas MU discharge rate (DR) during MVCs and submaximal contraction levels (≥30% MVT) was the lowest at the intermediate joint angle (55°). The highest DR during MVCs and high-level contractions (70% MVT), however, was at the most flexed knee position (85°), which was due to a greater DR increase 50-70% MVT compared to 25° and 55°. The onset-offset DR hysteresis (ΔF), an estimate of persistent inward current contribution to motoneuron discharge, decreased with knee flexion and increased with contraction level, whereas the degree of motoneuron input-output nonlinearity (brace height) did not vary with joint angle but decreased with contraction level. At 85°, ΔF increased more and brace height decreased less with contraction level compared to 25° and 55°. These findings indicate that vastii MU DR and its modulation with contraction level vary with knee-joint angle, which could be partly explained by the modulation of motoneuron intrinsic electrical properties.

NEW & NOTEWORTHY

This study explored the relationship between motoneuron output to the vastii muscles at different knee-joint angles (quadriceps lengths) and isometric contraction levels. We showed that the motor unit discharge rate was lowest at the angle of the greatest absolute torque capacity, whereas the contraction-level-induced increases in discharge rate and motoneuron excitability were the greatest in the flexed position. These findings suggest that joint-angle-dependent adjustments in sensory feedback modulate motor control of the knee-extensor muscles.

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