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J Appl Physiol (January 15, 2009). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.90851.2008
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Submitted on July 2, 2008
Revised on December 16, 2008
Accepted on January 8, 2009

REORGANIZATION OF MULTI-DIGIT PHYSIOLOGICAL TREMORS AFTER REPETITIVE CONTRACTIONS OF A SINGLE FINGER

Ing-Shiou Hwang1*, Zong-Ru Yang1, Chien-Ting Huang1, and Mei-Chun Guo1

1 National Cheng Kung University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ishwang{at}mail.ncku.edu.tw.

In light of the interplay among physiological finger tremors, this study was undertaken to investigate the transfer effect of fatigue upon coordinative strategies of multiple fingers. Fourteen volunteers conducted prolonged position tracking with a loaded middle finger while measures of neuromuscular function, including electromyographic activities of the extensor digitorum (ED)/flexor digitorum superficialis (FDS) and physiological tremors of the index, middle, ring, and little fingers, were monitored. The subjects exhibited inferior tracking congruency and an increase in the ED activity at the end of the tracking. Fatigue spread was manifested in a remarkable increase in tremor across fingers, in association with enhanced involuntary tremor coupling among fingers that was topologically organized in relation to the distance of the digits from the middle finger. Principal component analysis suggested that an enhanced 8-12 Hz central rhythm contributed primarily to the tremor restructure following fatigue spread. The observed tremor reorganization validated that the effect of fatigue was not limited to the instructed finger and that fatigue functionally decreased independence of the digits. The spreading of fatigue weakens neural inputs that diverge to motor units acting on various digits due to fatigue-related enhancement of common drive at the supraspinal level.







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