Reversal of H-reflex operant conditioning in the rat.

TitleReversal of H-reflex operant conditioning in the rat.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1996
AuthorsChen, XY, Wolpaw, J
JournalExperimental brain research. Experimentelle Hirnforschung. Expérimentation cérébrale
Volume112
Pagination58–62
Date Published11/1996
ISSN0014-4819
KeywordsH-Reflex, operant conditioning, plasticity, rat, soleus muscle, Spinal Cord
Abstract

In response to an operant conditioning task, rats can gradually increase or decrease soleus H-reflex amplitude without change in background electromyographic activity or M response amplitude. Both increase (under the HRup mode) and decrease (under the HRdown mode) develop over weeks. The present study investigated reversal of conditioned H-reflex change. Following collection of control data, rats were exposed to one mode (HRup or HRdown) for 50 days, and then exposed to the opposite mode for up to 72 days. Rats responded to each mode exposure with gradual, mode-appropriate change in H-reflex amplitude. This finding is consistent with other evidence that H-reflex conditioning depends on spinal cord plasticity. The effects of exposure to the HRup (or HRdown) mode were not affected by whether exposure followed previous exposure to the HRdown (or HRup) mode. In accord with recent studies suggesting that HRup and HRdown conditioning have different spinal mechanisms, these results suggest that reversal of H-reflex change is due primarily to the superimposition of additional plasticity rather than to decay of the plasticity responsible for the initial change.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8951407
DOI10.1007/BF00227178

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