Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?

We recently found that the cortical response to proprioceptive stimulation was greater when participants were planning a step than when they stood still, and that this sensory facilitation was suppressed in microgravity. The aim of the present study was to test whether the absence of gravity-related...

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Main Authors: Anahid H Saradjian, Dany Paleressompoulle, Didier Louber, Thelma Coyle, Jean Blouin, Laurence Mouchnino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4178185?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-450e2b19db6a4606acb1266f239c49bc2020-11-25T01:05:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10863610.1371/journal.pone.0108636Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?Anahid H SaradjianDany PaleressompoulleDidier LouberThelma CoyleJean BlouinLaurence MouchninoWe recently found that the cortical response to proprioceptive stimulation was greater when participants were planning a step than when they stood still, and that this sensory facilitation was suppressed in microgravity. The aim of the present study was to test whether the absence of gravity-related sensory afferents during movement planning in microgravity prevented the proprioceptive cortical processing to be enhanced. We reestablished a reference frame in microgravity by providing and translating a horizontal support on which the participants were standing and verified whether this procedure restored the proprioceptive facilitation. The slight translation of the base of support (lateral direction), which occurred prior to step initiation, stimulated at least cutaneous and vestibular receptors. The sensitivity to proprioceptive stimulation was assessed by measuring the amplitude of the cortical somatosensory-evoked potential (SEP, over the Cz electrode) following the vibration of the leg muscle. The vibration lasted 1 s and the participants were asked to either initiate a step at the vibration offset or to remain still. We found that the early SEP (90-160 ms) was smaller when the platform was translated than when it remained stationary, revealing the existence of an interference phenomenon (i.e., when proprioceptive stimulation is preceded by the stimulation of different sensory modalities evoked by the platform translation). By contrast, the late SEP (550 ms post proprioceptive stimulation onset) was greater when the translation preceded the vibration compared to a condition without pre-stimulation (i.e., no translation). This suggests that restoring a body reference system which is impaired in microgravity allowed a greater proprioceptive cortical processing. Importantly, however, the late SEP was similarly increased when participants either produced a step or remained still. We propose that the absence of step-induced facilitation of proprioceptive cortical processing results from a decreased weight of proprioception in the absence of balance constraints in microgravity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4178185?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anahid H Saradjian
Dany Paleressompoulle
Didier Louber
Thelma Coyle
Jean Blouin
Laurence Mouchnino
spellingShingle Anahid H Saradjian
Dany Paleressompoulle
Didier Louber
Thelma Coyle
Jean Blouin
Laurence Mouchnino
Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anahid H Saradjian
Dany Paleressompoulle
Didier Louber
Thelma Coyle
Jean Blouin
Laurence Mouchnino
author_sort Anahid H Saradjian
title Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
title_short Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
title_full Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
title_fullStr Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
title_full_unstemmed Do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
title_sort do gravity-related sensory information enable the enhancement of cortical proprioceptive inputs when planning a step in microgravity?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description We recently found that the cortical response to proprioceptive stimulation was greater when participants were planning a step than when they stood still, and that this sensory facilitation was suppressed in microgravity. The aim of the present study was to test whether the absence of gravity-related sensory afferents during movement planning in microgravity prevented the proprioceptive cortical processing to be enhanced. We reestablished a reference frame in microgravity by providing and translating a horizontal support on which the participants were standing and verified whether this procedure restored the proprioceptive facilitation. The slight translation of the base of support (lateral direction), which occurred prior to step initiation, stimulated at least cutaneous and vestibular receptors. The sensitivity to proprioceptive stimulation was assessed by measuring the amplitude of the cortical somatosensory-evoked potential (SEP, over the Cz electrode) following the vibration of the leg muscle. The vibration lasted 1 s and the participants were asked to either initiate a step at the vibration offset or to remain still. We found that the early SEP (90-160 ms) was smaller when the platform was translated than when it remained stationary, revealing the existence of an interference phenomenon (i.e., when proprioceptive stimulation is preceded by the stimulation of different sensory modalities evoked by the platform translation). By contrast, the late SEP (550 ms post proprioceptive stimulation onset) was greater when the translation preceded the vibration compared to a condition without pre-stimulation (i.e., no translation). This suggests that restoring a body reference system which is impaired in microgravity allowed a greater proprioceptive cortical processing. Importantly, however, the late SEP was similarly increased when participants either produced a step or remained still. We propose that the absence of step-induced facilitation of proprioceptive cortical processing results from a decreased weight of proprioception in the absence of balance constraints in microgravity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4178185?pdf=render
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