Title: H-reflex Methods and Significance
1H-reflex Methods and Significance
- Chetan Phadke, P.T., Ph.D.
- Post-doctoral Fellow, Mentor Carolynn Patten
- Neural Control Movement Lab
- VA, BRRC
2Monosynaptic reflex pathway
3H-reflex
- Paul Hoffmann first described it in 1910
- Electrical analog of stretch reflex
- By-passes muscle spindle and Gamma
- Direct sensory fiber (Ia) electrical stimulation
4The H-reflex
Muscle Spindle
Ia
a
H-reflex
Muscle
M-wave
Stimulus Artifact
Courtesy University of Louisville (Dept. of
Neurosurgery) and Frazier Rehab.
5Window into Spinal Cord
- Enables study of spinal excitability
- Excitability is regulated by inhibition from
supraspinal and sensory flow - The level of inhibition on the H-reflex
determines the amplitude - Easily evoked in most muscles
- Soleus widely studied
Palmieri (2004), Zehr (2001)
6Functional Significance
- Greater in Sitting than Standing
- Greater in stance phase than swing
- Pedaling modulation similar to walking
- Arm swing and arm cycling alter soleus H-reflex
- Walking on a narrow beam
- Gymnasts
Capaday (1987), Trimble (2001), Phadke (2007),
Boorman (1992), Zehr (2001), Llewellyn (1990),
7Phase dependent Hreflex modulation
8H-reflex post-SCI
Non-injured
SCI
5V
31.25 ms
9Functional Correlation
- Greater amplitude post-SCI and slower ground
walking speed - Single LT and bicycling session Smaller reflexes
in walking and semi-reclined and increased ground
walking speed - Long-term LT resulted in smaller reflexes in
walking and faster ground walking speed
Trimble (2001), Phadke (2009), Behrman (2008 -
unpublished)