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Brain 2000 May;123(Pt 5):1017-1026

Abnormal reciprocal inhibition between antagonist muscles in Parkinson's
disease.

Meunier S, Pol S, Houeto JL, Vidailhet M

Clinical Neurophysiology, Reeducation and INSERM U289, Hopital de la
Salpetriere and Department of Neurology, Hopital Saint Antoine, Paris,
France.

Disynaptic Ia reciprocal inhibition acts, at the spinal level, by actively
inhibiting antagonist motor neurons and reducing the inhibition of agonist
motor neurons. The deactivation of this pathway in Parkinson's disease is
still debated. Disynaptic reciprocal inhibition of H reflexes in the forearm
flexor muscles was examined in 15 control subjects and 16 treated
parkinsonian patients at rest and at the onset of a voluntary wrist flexion.
Two patients were reassessed 18 h after withdrawal of antiparkinsonian
medication. At rest, the level of Ia reciprocal inhibition between the wrist
antagonist muscles was not significantly different between patients and
controls. In contrast, clear abnormalities of this inhibition were revealed
by voluntary movements in the
patients. In normal subjects, at the onset of a wrist flexion, Ia reciprocal
inhibition showed a large decrease, and we argue that this decrease is
supraspinal in origin. On the less affected sides of the patients the
descending modulation was still present but lower than in controls; on the
more affected sides this modulation had vanished almost completely. These
movement-induced abnormalities of disynaptic Ia reciprocal inhibition were
closely associated with Parkinson's disease but were probably not dependent
on L-dopa. They could play a role in the disturbances of precise voluntary
movements observed in Parkinson's disease.