Supraspinal Activation Induced by Visual Kinesthetic Illusion Modulates Spinal Excitability
Takeru Okouchi, Ryo Hirabayashi, Saki Nakashima, Asuka Abe, Hirotake Yokota, Chie Sekine, Tomonobu Ishigaki, Hiroshi Akuzawa, Mutsuaki Edama

TL;DR
This study shows that watching a video of movement can change spinal nerve activity in ways similar to actual movement.
Contribution
The study introduces a visual kinesthetic illusion as an alternative to physical exercise for modulating spinal excitability.
Findings
The F/M amplitude ratio of the tibialis anterior increased by 44% during the illusion condition.
The F-wave persistence of the soleus decreased by 23% from the start of the illusion condition.
Abstract
Repetitive passive movement (RPM) enhances reciprocal inhibition. RPM is more effective when performed rapidly and at wide joint angles. However, patients with limited joint range of motion may not receive the most effective RPM. Therefore, having an alternative method for performing RPM in patients who cannot perform actual exercise due to limited joint motion is necessary. This study investigated the effects of RPM on spinal excitability using a visual kinesthetic illusion. Participants included 17 healthy adults (7 women). Measurements were taken before, during, and immediately after the intervention. We established two intervention conditions: the control condition, in which participants focused their attention forward, and the illusion condition, in which participants watched a video about RPM. F-waves from the tibialis anterior and soleus muscles were measured, and F-wave…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies · Spinal Cord Injury Research · Motor Control and Adaptation
