Artículo de revista
Interrogating interneurone function using threshold tracking of the H reflex in healthy subjects and patients with motor neurone disease
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Clinical Neurophysiology (2020) 131:8 Págs. 1986-1996
10.1016/j.clinph.2020.03.028
Autor
Howell, James
Sangari, Sina
Matamala, José Manuel
Kiernan, Matthew C.
Marchand-Pauvert, Véronique
Burke, David
Institución
Resumen
Objective: The excitability of the lower motoneurone pool is traditionally tested using the H
reflex and a constant-stimulus paradigm, which measures changes in the amplitude of the reflex
response. This technique has limitations because reflex responses of different size must involve the
recruitment or inhibition of different motoneurones. The threshold-tracking technique ensures that the
changes in excitability occur for an identical population of motoneurones. We aimed to assess this
technique and then apply it in patients with motor neurone disease (MND).
Methods: The threshold-tracking approach was assessed in 17 healthy subjects and 11 patients
with MND. The soleus H reflex was conditioned by deep peroneal nerve stimulation producing
reciprocal Ia and so-called D1 and D2 inhibitions, which are believed to reflect presynaptic inhibition of
soleus Ia afferents.
Results: Threshold tracking was quicker than the constant-stimulus technique and reliable,
properties that may be advantageous for clinical studies. D1 inhibition was significantly reduced in
patients with MND.
Conclusions: Threshold tracking is useful and may be preferable under some conditions for
studying the excitability of the motoneurone pool. The decreased D1 inhibition in the patients suggests
that presynaptic inhibition may be reduced in MND.
Significance: Reduced presynaptic inhibition could be evidence of an interneuronopathy in
MND. It is possible that the hyperreflexia is a spinal pre-motoneuronal disorder, and not definitive
evidence of corticospinal involvement in MND.