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1 racked MUs) and 1.5 (group of all identified motor units).
2 ry and sufficient for proper function of the motor unit.
3 ntraction speed, or the tetanic force of the motor unit.
4 ps of current and the force developed by its motor unit.
5 tatory synaptic drive required to activate a motor unit.
6 ed to treat this aspect of the dysfunctional motor unit.
7 MU-mode magnitude in the space of individual motor units.
8 that there is no somatotopic organization of motor units.
9 rons and the contractile properties of their motor units.
10 rather than on rate modulation of individual motor units.
11 stimulation of single motor axons to thenar motor units.
12 nic and intermittent) as observed for the 53 motor units.
13 ate the significant and rapid fatigue of the motor units.
14 rential recruitment of separately innervated motor units.
15 uscles with pattern that mimic fast and slow motor units.
16 s nerve regeneration and restores functional motor units.
17 ng and were thus considered to form anatomic motor units.
18 ed, consistent with a loss of fast-fatigable motor units.
19 t of sphincter function and the formation of motor units.
20 slow SOL (200 pulses at 20 Hz every 30 sec) motor units.
21 cruitment pattern of slow versus fast-twitch motor units.
22 nt motor units and superior survival of slow motor units.
23 nociceptive afferent inputs on low-threshold motor units.
24 perisomatic connections are observed between motor units.
25 ing decision-making circuits, and individual motor units.
26 ree distinct types of later born "secondary" motor units.
27 d contraction was lower for the intermittent motor units (11.0 +/- 3.3 pulses s(-1)) than the tonic m
28 s (11.0 +/- 3.3 pulses s(-1)) than the tonic motor units (13.7 +/- 3.3 pulses s(-1); P = 0.005), and
29 motor units (34.6 +/- 12.3%) than the tonic motor units (21.2 +/- 9.4%) at recruitment (P = 0.001) a
30 ike interval was higher for the intermittent motor units (34.6 +/- 12.3%) than the tonic motor units
31 Loss of EMG amplitude due to the overlap of motor unit action potentials (amplitude cancellation), h
32 tromyography recordings were decomposed into motor unit action potentials to examine the neural drive
39 an oxygen-delivery-dependent balance between motor unit activation and peripheral fatigue development
40 an oxygen-delivery-dependent balance between motor unit activation and peripheral fatigue development
41 ships between muscle fatigue development and motor unit activation during the determination of CF.
42 The roles of muscle fatigue development and motor unit activation in determining the heavy- to sever
43 er degree of movement difficulty, and unique motor unit activation pattern associated with maximal-le
47 rt-term synchronisation of left and right EI motor unit activity and significant coherence between le
49 Needle electromyography revealed continuous motor unit activity in the 50- to 70-Hz frequency during
50 Here, we report the temporal patterning of motor unit activity in the soleus muscle of awake, behav
54 n and a decrease in the number of functional motor units, all relevant to the clinical presentation o
56 nce between the recruitment threshold of the motor unit and the target force for the sustained contra
57 rence between the recruitment threshold of a motor unit and the target force of the sustained contrac
58 s, and it associates with both a heavy chain motor unit and tubulin located within the A-tubule of th
59 reases in the recruitment-threshold force of motor units and a similar input-output gain of the motor
60 s of motor neurons, enlargement of surviving motor units and instability of neuromuscular junction tr
62 The 4DL muscles contained between 4 and 9 motor units and motor unit sizes ranged in distribution
65 ent with the death of fast fatigue-resistant motor units and superior survival of slow motor units.
67 rce and contractile characteristics, rescued motor units and, importantly, improved motor neuron surv
68 either the recruitment of additional muscle motor units and/or the progressive recruitment of less e
69 sciculations, axonal conduction block in the motor unit arborization and of variable axonal conductio
70 Two standard tests for the evaluation of the motor unit are nerve conduction studies/electromyography
71 bules and lead to a model for how individual motor units are controlled within the outer dynein arm.
74 hesis to test two hypotheses: (i) individual motor units are organized into stable groups (MU-modes)
75 for muscle control is that large, fatigable motor units are preferentially recruited before smaller
76 ressive decline in the muscle force at which motor units are recruited during repeated voluntary cont
80 dings challenge the classical concept of the motor unit as an anatomically distinct and functionally
81 ficantly alters the functional output of the motor unit as measured with compound muscle action poten
86 When analysing lower- and higher-threshold motor unit behaviour at high forces we observed differen
88 own how the central nervous system regulates motor unit behaviour in the presence of muscle pain at h
89 f sibling neurites within single fluorescent motor units, both during development and during regenera
90 discharged in association with two different motor units, but were blocked or delayed whenever the tw
92 We conclude that restoration of functional motor units by embryonic stem cells is possible and repr
93 are preferentially recruited before smaller motor units by the lowest-intensity electrical cuff stim
94 ntation of confocal image projections of 4DL motor units, by applying high resolution (63x, 1.4 NA ob
96 athological mechanism in ALS, and each lower motor unit cell type vulnerable to its own set of age-re
99 m to yield subparticles containing different motor unit combinations and assess the microtubule-bindi
101 unctions inhere to RqlH-(1-505), a monomeric motor unit comprising the ATPase, linker and zinc-bindin
102 pared with the rostral band, suggesting that motor units conforming to a Fast Synapsing (FaSyn) pheno
106 sarcomere displacements, we monitored single motor unit contractions in soleus and vastus lateralis m
108 his, we took advantage of the relatively few motor units controlling the wings of a hawk moth, Manduc
110 fatigue development and increase the rate of motor unit deactivation, and (2) blood flow reperfusion
111 t of mutant animals demonstrated progressive motor unit decline in the hindlimb to a greater extent t
112 trophy (SMA), and aging, fast-fatigable (FF) motor units degenerate early, whereas motor neurons inne
114 ult in muscle recovery and re-recruitment of motor units despite continuous maximal effort, (3) resul
117 average discharge rate for the intermittent motor units did not change across 211 +/- 153 s of inter
121 e motor neuron recruitment speed and maximal motor unit discharge rate largely explains the individua
124 tor neuron recruitment and the instantaneous motor unit discharge rate were analysed as a function of
125 daptations included significant increases in motor unit discharge rate, decreases in the recruitment-
128 but were blocked or delayed whenever the two motor units discharged within a few milliseconds of one
129 a, and EMG doublet or multiplet ('myokymic') motor unit discharges, indicated that an autoantibody-me
131 lucosylceramide, to neurodegeneration and to motor unit dismantling in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
134 3.3 +/- 2.5 pps (average across subjects and motor units) during the plateau phase of the submaximal
135 or diagnosing and tracking ALS, we monitored motor unit dynamics in a B6.SOD1G93A mouse model of ALS
136 the initial cellular events that precipitate motor unit dysfunction and loss remain poorly characteri
137 t turning behavior than spike count in every motor unit, even though there is sufficient variation in
139 f synaptic consolidation enhanced functional motor unit expansion in the absence of presynaptic NCAM.
140 re, we developed a phenomenological model of motor unit fatigue as a tractable means to predict muscl
141 he potential utility of the model to predict motor unit fatigue for more complicated, real-world appl
146 The findings suggest that the adaptations in motor unit function may be attributable to changes in sy
148 unting for this striking specificity, termed motor unit homogeneity, remain incompletely understood,
151 t assignment of axon terminals to identified motor units imaged at lower optical resolution (40x, 1.3
152 ose previously reported for an intact dynein motor unit in the absence of ATP, suggesting that it res
153 scharge times were obtained from 23 pairs of motor units in 14 subjects to assess the strength of mot
155 actile abnormalities, the loss of functional motor units in EDL muscles and delayed end-stage disease
157 s suggest an increase in the excitability of motor units in iRLS that could enhance the likelihood of
159 lies on the recruitment and derecruitment of motor units in response to the oscillatory descending dr
160 cruitment and derecruitment forces of single motor units in the human extensor digitorum and tibialis
161 tween these afferents and the recruitment of motor units in the lower face during the dynamics of spe
162 ny body pattern components may have multiple motor units in the optic lobe and that these are organiz
163 t time that the discharge characteristics of motor units in the tibialis anterior muscle tracked acro
165 large populations of longitudinally tracked motor units in tibialis anterior before and after 4 week
166 t biological tool to understand formation of motor units in vitro and a potential therapeutic tool to
167 c development in either vulnerable or stable motor units, indicating that abnormal pre-symptomatic de
168 the CNS control the activation of individual motor units, individual muscles, groups of muscles, kine
171 crease in excitatory drive to high-threshold motor units is likely required to compensate for the inh
174 ort-term synchrony was measured for pairs of motor units located within and across muscles activated
175 motor systems of the brain, spinal cord, and motor unit make functional use of new circuitry feasible
176 of a 3D physiological and pathophysiological motor unit model consisting of motor neurons coupled to
180 vestibular stimulation modulates human neck motor unit (MU) activity at sinusoidal frequencies up to
182 TRACT: During graded isometric contractions, motor unit (MU) firing rates increase steeply upon recru
184 Compound muscle action potential (CMAP) and motor unit (MU) number estimation (MUNE) are well-establ
185 omuscular structure and function in terms of motor unit (MU) number, size and MU potential (MUP) stab
188 ol of muscle is realized at the level of the motor unit (MU), it seems important to consider the phys
190 o NMJ degeneration in a manner that reflects motor-unit (MU) vulnerability and potentially impairs co
192 w method is proposed for tracking individual motor units (MUs) across multiple experimental sessions
194 G) and force were recorded from 17 paralysed motor units (n = 7 subjects) in response to intraneural
196 ata and clinico-neurophysiological measures (motor unit number and size indices, force of contraction
197 decline in muscle strength, vital capacity, motor unit number estimates, ALS Functional Rating Scale
199 cular atrophy (SMA) 1, 2, and 3 subjects via motor unit number estimation (MUNE) and maximum compound
200 hology, we developed an electrophysiological motor unit number estimation (MUNE) assay to measure the
201 compound muscle action potential (CMAP) and motor unit number estimation (MUNE), as in human SMA.
204 with clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index (MUNIX) and T2-weighted whole-bo
206 n muscle, energy metabolites correlated with motor unit number index, muscle power, and speed of walk
207 This stalk-length dependency suggests that motor units of the spasmoneme may be organized in such a
209 covery (P < 0.001) and the re-recruitment of motor units (P < 0.001) to levels not different from CON
210 was to determine the fatigability of thenar motor units paralysed chronically (10 +/- 2 years) by ce
213 assessed quantitative parameters related to motor unit potential (MUP) morphology derived from elect
214 automated software (DQEMG), which extracted motor unit potential trains (MUPTs) contributed by indiv
216 le electrodes were used to sample individual motor unit potentials (MUPs) and near-fibre MUPs in the
218 rve stimulation that each electrode recorded motor unit potentials innervated by different axons.
220 ontrol with microbial opsins, recruitment of motor units proceeds in the physiological recruitment se
221 ities in the understanding of adjustments in motor unit properties due to training interventions or t
223 in ATP requirements of the already recruited motor units rather than to changes in the recruitment pa
225 d scientific advantages compared with single motor units recorded from intramuscular electrodes.
227 ole-cell recordings, was reduced, and single motor unit recordings in awake, behaving neonates showed
228 mpared, for the first time, the behaviour of motor units recruited at low and high forces in response
231 al drive, which was measured as the speed of motor unit recruitment before the generation of afferent
232 ve increased BL firing rate and insufficient motor unit recruitment in specific phases in the lower l
233 ndicated by multiple independent measures of motor unit recruitment including conduction latency, con
234 In voluntary activation the heterogeneous motor unit recruitment together with immediate motion tr
236 ests masters athletes are more successful at motor unit remodelling, the reinnervation of denervated
238 rief review, basic contractile properties of motor units residing in human hand muscles are described
242 uscular electromyography to demonstrate that motor units sampled from the tibialis anterior show indi
250 es contained between 4 and 9 motor units and motor unit sizes ranged in distribution from 3 to 111 mo
251 In anaesthetized dogs, multiunit and single motor unit (SMU) EMG activity was monitored in the dorsa
252 y and coherence between discharges of single motor units (SMUs) in the first dorsal interosseous (1DI
253 s hitherto unobtainable information on human motor unit structure and function, which may allow earli
254 e amelioration of neuronal histopathology in motor units such as spinal motor neurons, neuromuscular
255 ies and organization of the neural inputs to motor units supplying finger muscles is essential for un
256 ase, resulting in increased muscle force and motor unit survival and a significant increase in motor
257 its in 14 subjects to assess the strength of motor unit synchronisation and coherence during the thre
261 With paralysis and baclofen, the median motor unit tetanic forces were significantly weaker, twi
263 hat binds to other subunits and a C-terminal motor unit that contains six AAA (ATPase associated with
265 small mammals mainly relies on the number of motor units that are recruited rather than on rate modul
266 l muscle fibers they innervate form discrete motor units that execute movements of varying force and
267 of brain circuits, from sensory receptors to motor units, that are involved in control of this behavi
268 By examining the activity of individual motor units (the muscle fibers innervated by a single mo
269 project asymmetrically to the right and left motor units, thereby mediating curved orientation swims.
270 lects the changing distributions of measured motor unit time constants and effectively diagnoses mice
272 cleotide-independent manner and tethers this motor unit to the A-tubule of the outer doublet microtub
274 To determine the role of denervation and motor unit turnover in the age-related increase in skele
279 ective impact of SMN depletion on the distal motor unit using a series of SMN2-expressing transgenic
280 ent of upper/fore- limb and lower/hind- limb motor units using objective electrophysiological CMAP an
282 To investigate the force production of mouse motor units, we simultaneously recorded, for the first t
287 rmalized recruitment-threshold forces of the motor units were decreased after strength training (P <
289 e patterns of up to 12 simultaneously active motor units were identified from each signal using compu
293 nd that the recruitment thresholds of single motor units were unchanged during repeated contractions,
294 to consider the physiological properties of motor units when attempting to understand and predict mu
296 nces in variance of motor endplate length in motor units, which correlated weakly with their motor un
297 sented as the pooled spike trains of several motor units, which provides an accurate representation o
298 The results suggest that newly recruited motor units with recruitment thresholds closer to the ta
299 tials at more regular and greater rates than motor units with recruitment thresholds further from the
300 tead, many of these components have multiple motor units within the optic lobe and are organized in a