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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 15, 1998, 18(24):10629-10639
Extraocular Motor Unit and Whole-Muscle Responses in the Lateral
Rectus Muscle of the Squirrel Monkey
Stephen J.
Goldberg1,
M. Alex
Meredith1, and
Mary
S.
Shall2
Departments of 1 Anatomy and 2 Physical
Therapy, Virginia Commonwealth University, Medical College of Virginia,
Richmond, Virginia 23298-0709
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ABSTRACT |
Because primate studies provide data for the current experimental
models of the human oculomotor system, we investigated the relationship
of lateral rectus muscle motoneuron firing to muscle unit contractile
characteristics in the squirrel monkey. Also examined was the
correlation of whole-muscle contractile force with the degree of evoked
eye displacement. A force transducer was used to record lateral rectus
whole-muscle or muscle unit contraction in response to abducens
whole-nerve stimulation or stimulation of single abducens motoneurons
or axons. Horizontal eye displacement was recorded using a magnetic
search coil.
(1) Motor units could be categorized based on contraction speed (fusion
frequency) and fatigue. (2) The kt value (change in motoneuronal firing
necessary to increase motor unit force by 1.0 mg) of the units
correlated with maximum tetanic tension. (3) There was some tendency
for maximum tetanic tension of this unit population to separate into
three groups. (4) At a constant frequency of 100 Hz, 95% of the motor
units demonstrated significantly different force levels dependent on
immediately previous stimulation history (hysteresis). (5) A mean force
change of 0.32 gm/° and a mean frequency change of 4.7 Hz/° of eye
displacement were observed in response to whole-nerve stimulation.
These quantitative data provide the first contractile measures of
primate extraocular motor units. Models of eye movement dynamics may
need to consider the nonlinear transformations observed between
stimulation rate and muscle tension as well as the probability that as
few as two to three motor units can deviate the eye 1°.
Key words:
extraocular; eye movement; abducens; motoneuron; monkey; oculomotor
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INTRODUCTION |
Eye movements have been extensively
examined in primates, and a number of system models have been based on
neuronal firing patterns in relation to measures of eye movements in
alert animals. Numerous investigators have studied the firing patterns
of extraocular motoneurons, surrounding reticular formation cells and
other higher center neurons that serve to generate precise and
repeatable saccades, pursuit, and fixations (Robinson, 1981 ; Fuchs et
al., 1985 ; Sparks, 1986 ; Goldberg and Segraves, 1989 ; Dean, 1996 ;
Moschovakis et al., 1996 ). At the extraocular periphery, the
transformation from motoneuron firing to eye position is often
considered to be a simple linear function (Keller, 1981 ; Fuchs et al.,
1988 ) as motor units are recruited into action and firing frequencies
change to adjust force. However, to our knowledge, the contractile
characteristics of primate extraocular motor units have not been investigated.
In contrast, although central oculomotor control has not been studied
with the same intensity in cat as in primate, the contractile characteristics of cat extraocular muscles and motor units have been
extensively examined (Lennerstrand, 1974a ; Goldberg, 1990 ). Recent
motor unit studies in cat focused on issues relevant to our
understanding of the "behaving" eye movement system in an attempt
to bridge the gap between acute motor unit studies, muscle morphology,
and motoneuron activation in the alert animal. First, as in spinal cord
motor units, speed- and fatigue-based criteria (Burke et al., 1973 ;
Burke, 1981 ) were used to separate extraocular motor units into five
functional categories (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 , 1995 ; Shall et al.,
1996 ) that are numerically similar to the five or six anatomically
determined muscle fiber types that have been proposed for extraocular
muscle (Spencer and Porter, 1988 ).
Second, the change in single motoneuronal firing needed to increase
motor unit force by 1.0 mg (kt value) was explored (Shall and Goldberg,
1992 ; Shall et al., 1996 ). High kt value units were generally weak, low
kt value units were generally powerful, and the possible relation
between kt value and motoneuron K value (the change in motoneuron
firing as alert animals fixated targets in 1° increments) (Keller,
1981 ; Delgado-Garcia et al., 1986 ; Fuchs et al., 1988 ) will be
considered in the Discussion.
Third, muscle force inequalities at identical frequencies of
stimulation but with dissimilar stimulation histories
("hysteresis") (Binder-MacLeod and Clamann, 1989 ; Binder-MacLeod
and Barrish, 1992 ; Shall et al., 1996 ) were examined. The percentage
difference in motor unit force hysteresis (in cat) was greater than the
percentage difference in motoneuron firing rate (in primate)
(Eckmiller, 1974 ) as primary eye position was reached from different
directions (Goldstein and Robinson, 1986 ).
Finally, the summation of motor unit tensions was examined when
approximately five motor units were simultaneously activated (Goldberg
et al., 1997b ). It was found that there were force decrements of
50% in ~25% of the motor units studied (i.e., some units did not
summate linearly). It was suggested that with more units simultaneously active, as in normal eye movements, a greater percentage of units might
show nonlinear summation.
The present study was designed to fill some of the gaps in our
knowledge about the contractile properties of primate extraocular muscles. Because current models of eye movement control are based in
the primate, these data are clearly germane to our understanding of
this intricate and dynamic system in animals and in man.
Preliminary data have been presented in abstract form (Goldberg et al.,
1997a , 1998 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
All procedures for the care and use of monkeys complied with the
United States Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of
Laboratory Animals, and were approved by the Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee at Virginia Commonwealth University. All procedures
were performed under deep surgical anesthesia and are similar to those
previously performed in the cat (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ; Shall et
al., 1996 ; Goldberg and Shall, 1997 ).
Surgical preparation. Six adult male squirrel monkeys
(Saimiri sciureus, 0.7-1.1 kg) were used. Monkeys were
premedicated with 15 mg/kg ketamine, 0.1 mg/kg acepromazine, and 10 mg/kg glycopyrrolate, all administered intramuscularly. The animals
were then anesthetized with 2.0% isoflurane. While under isoflurane,
the animals were given sodium pentobarbital (15 mg/kg, i.p.), and the
gas anesthesia was discontinued. Supplemental doses of sodium
pentobarbital were provided intravenously to maintain deep surgical
anesthesia as assessed by the absence of blink reflexes and withdrawal
to digit pinch. A tracheostomy was performed, and body temperature was maintained at 37°C with a heating pad. The monkeys' EKG, end-tidal CO2, and respiratory rate were continuously
monitored, again to insure deep anesthesia and to maintain normal vital
signs. An intravenous drip of lactated Ringer's solution with 5%
dextrose was also provided.
The animal was placed in a Kopf stereotaxic frame. A midline incision
was made from the forehead to the back of the neck. In two of the six
animals a bilateral, posterior parietal craniotomy was performed, and
the occipital cortex and cerebellum were aspirated. The floor of the
fourth ventricle was thus exposed to see the facial colliculus and,
thereby, localize the abducens nucleus. An anterior parietal craniotomy
was performed in all animals to facilitate placement of a bipolar
electrode used to stimulate the abducens nerve in the brainstem
(coordinates: anterior 1.5 mm, lateral 2.0 mm, depth 6.0 mm) (Emmers
and Akert, 1963 ). We approached the nerve coordinates at an angle of
65° from the vertical. The temporalis muscle was retracted, the
lateral bony orbit was removed, and the lateral rectus muscle and its
tendon were exposed. The muscle was kept warm and moist with mineral
oil. Individual experiments could last as long as 15 hr after which the
animals were killed with an overdose of sodium pentobarbital.
In four of the six animals the posterior parietal craniotomy and
occipital and cerebellar aspiration were not performed. All experimental procedures were performed using a stimulation electrode placed near the abducens nerve in the brainstem, with electrodes as
described below.
Stimulation and recording techniques. In the first three
animals the abducens nerve was stimulated with a stainless steel bipolar electrode (0.5 mm diameter and 2.0 mm between poles) with ~1.0 mm of uninsulated surface at each tip. Optimal placement of the
electrode was determined based on contractile responses of the lateral
rectus muscle to nerve stimulation. The nerve was stimulated with a 0.1 msec duration pulse (400 µA) at 1.0 Hz to antidromically identify
single motoneurons in the abducens nucleus of two of these animals
(only whole-muscle data were taken on one animal). These neurons were
located using glass micropipette electrodes (1.0 µm tip) filled with
1.6 M potassium citrate. The resistance of these electrodes
ranged from 10 to 30 M , and they were driven with a hydraulic
microdrive into the area of the abducens nucleus (coordinates:
posterior 2.0 mm, lateral 1.0 mm, depth 3.5 mm) (Emmers and Akert,
1963 ). Identified single motoneurons were stimulated extracellularly
with these electrodes to evoke contractions of single-muscle units in
the lateral rectus muscle (Lennerstrand, 1974b ; Goldberg and Shall,
1997 ).
In the remaining three animals a bipolar "brush" electrode was used
to stimulate the whole-nerve or single-muscle fibers within the nerve.
Each pole of the brush electrode was constructed in the following
manner. Nine insulated stainless steel wires [25 µm diameter, often
used for electromyographic (EMG) recordings] were inserted into a
single 22 gauge stainless steel tube (10 cm long), and the entire
structure was sealed with an insulating material (InsL-X). The wire
brush was cut with a scissors so that ~2.0 mm extended beyond the end
of the stainless steel tube. This short extension insured the rigidity
of the electrode and exposed the wires at the tip only. The wires on
the other end of the tube were soldered to miniature nine pin
connectors. The insulated tubes with their brush electrodes were then
glued together with InsL-X so that there was 2.0 mm between poles. This
electrode enabled us to stimulate between each nine wire pole so that
the electrode could operate as a "standard" bipolar electrode with each pole being ~225 µm in diameter. The whole abducens nerve was
activated in this way. Alternatively, we could stimulate between any
two of the 18 single brush wires with varying intensity to activate
single axons within the nerve.
The responses of the lateral rectus muscle to stimulation of the whole
abducens nerve were recorded as follows. A scleral search coil
consisting of induction coils sutured to the sclera after the method of
Judge et al. (1980) was used to measure eye movement. The animal, with
the scleral search coil in place, was positioned in the center of a
magnetic coil frame (1.0 m diameter). Output from the scleral coil was
routed to an amplifier (Remmel, 1980 ) with a sensitivity to scleral
coil displacement equivalent to ~0.5°. Amplified signals were sent
to an oscilloscope where the vertical and horizontal components of eye
position were displayed. These data were also routed to a digital tape
recorder for later analysis. For calibration, a 3.0 mm reflective disk
was placed on the cornea on which a fiber-optic light was focused and
reflected onto a tangent screen. Any movement of the eye was
accompanied by a corresponding movement of the reflected spot on the
screen. The abducens nerve was stimulated over a range of predetermined tetanic frequencies (200 msec duration tetanic trains) to produce a
range of horizontal ocular excursions, all starting from primary position. The voltage output obtained from the scleral search coil was
calibrated with the angular displacement of the reflected spot. To
correlate stimulation frequency and amplitude of ocular displacement
with tension generation, the following procedure was also necessary.
To measure the tension produced by stimulation of the abducens nerve
from an intact lateral rectus muscle, a 5-0 silk thread was looped
under the tendon of the muscle at its scleral attachment. The tendon,
however, remained intact and attached to the globe (Goldberg and Shall,
1997 ). The other end of the loop of thread was attached to a strain
gauge (Pixie model 8108, Endevco; natural frequency of 2.0 kHz and a
compliance of ~2 µm/gm). The strain gauge carrier (mounted on the
stereotaxic frame) was manipulated to tighten the thread and bring the
muscle to optimal length for the largest isometric twitch tension when
the abducens nerve was stimulated. Lateral rectus muscle position to
assess maximum tetanic tension has been shown to be the same as that
for single twitch stimulation (Barmack et al., 1971 ). Identical
stimulation current and frequencies were used during the previous eye
movement measurement procedure and this tension measurement procedure.
By combining these two techniques, we were able to determine the
relationship between stimulation frequency, muscle tension, and degree
of ocular excursion. We insured that we stimulated the entire abducens
nerve to elicit whole-muscle responses in the following manner. We
found that a stimulation intensity of ~400 µA elicited maximal
twitches. Reduction of that intensity yielded smaller twitches, whereas increased stimulation intensity did not evoke larger responses, showing
that the whole nerve was already being activated. We routinely stimulated at ~200 µA above the intensity that yielded a maximum response (supramaximal stimulation) to insure consistent whole-nerve activation. Similar procedures have been used by us (Meredith and
Goldberg, 1986 ; Nelson et al., 1986 ; Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ; Goldberg
and Shall, 1997 ) and others (Cooper and Eccles, 1930 ; Barmack et al.,
1971 ; Waldeck et al., 1995 ) in the cat, and whole extraocular muscle
responses were comparable among the studies.
Two stainless steel wires (25 µm diameter) were inserted (through a
28 gauge needle), from dorsal to ventral, into the proximal and distal
ends of the lateral rectus muscle to record both whole-muscle and
single-muscle unit EMG potentials (Shall and Goldberg, 1995 ). The wires
were ~5.0 mm apart and were used as a bipolar EMG electrode (Shall
and Goldberg, 1995 ) in this relatively small muscle (observed to be
approximately one-third the size of the cat's lateral rectus muscle).
On-line analysis of the EMG response in the last three animals insured
that we stimulated single axons within the abducens nerve with our
brush electrode. Very low intensity stimulation (10-50 µA) between
two of the fine wires of the brush electrode often evoked twitch
contractions of the muscle. Following the technique of Macefield et al.
(1996) , stimulation intensity was reduced until neither a contractile
nor EMG response was evident. As the stimulation intensity was again
raised we observed a simultaneous contractile and EMG response.
Usually, continued increases in stimulation intensity, within a wide
range, did not evoke larger contractile or altered EMG potentials. Once
this high-intensity range was exceeded we did note larger contractions
and generally larger or more complex EMG shapes. This indicated that
more than one muscle unit was being activated. We stayed well within
the "acceptable" range for each unit and continuously monitored the EMG response for alterations during all twitch and tetanic stimulation paradigms. In addition, changing the active poles within the brush electrode evoked different contractile and EMG responses, indicating that another single axon was being stimulated. Small changes (50-100 µm) in electrode depth also provided new sites at which different units could be stimulated. A large number of motor units could be
studied in this way in a single animal, and it greatly reduced the
surgical risk. It should also be noted here that muscle units activated
through stimulation of single motoneurons using micropipettes in the
abducens nucleus showed similar contraction characteristics to those
muscle units activated through axonal stimulation within the nerve
using the brush electrode (see Results).
Stimulation paradigms. Whole-muscle and single motor unit
mechanical properties were measured in response to 0.1-0.2 msec duration rectangular stimuli applied through the nerve-stimulating electrodes or glass micropipette electrodes at various frequencies (Shall et al., 1996 ). All stimulation trains were delivered using a
programmable pulse generator (AMPI Master-8). Whole-muscle and single-unit twitch contraction time (onset of force to peak force) and
twitch tension were averaged over five contractions at 1 Hz. Twitch
potentiation is not noted at this frequency (Meredith and Goldberg,
1986 ; Nelson et al., 1986 ; Shall and Goldberg, 1992 , 1995 ; Shall et
al., 1995 ). The twitch measurements were made before tetanic
stimulation to avoid potentiation.
Lateral eye movement excursion, whole-muscle, and motor unit tetanic
tension were assessed as follows. Tetanic tension measurements were
taken during a series of constant frequency, 200 msec pulse trains at
stimulation rates ranging from 50 to 300 Hz in 10 Hz increments.
Delivery of each stimulation train was separated by 5 sec intervals to
ensure a return to baseline force. The maximum tetanic tension for each
unit was seen at or about the fusion frequency of the unit.
Fusion frequency was defined as the stimulation frequency at which
individual twitches could not be resolved at the tension plateau. The
kt value (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ) was defined as the slope of the
tetanic tension versus the stimulation rate from 50 Hz until fusion
frequency of that individual motor unit. For example, a motor unit kt
value of 1.5 would indicate that a frequency change of 1.5 Hz
would increase the tension of the unit by 1.0 mg.
A pulse/step and fatigue assessment was done on single motor units
only. Tension assessments were made during a series of 200 msec,
pulse/step tetanic trains. Each stimulation train began with a 25 msec,
high-frequency pulse phase (500 Hz for 10 msec and 250 Hz for 15 msec)
(Fuchs and Luschei, 1970 ), followed by a 175 msec step phase in an
attempt to mimic motoneuron discharge changes observed during saccades
and subsequent fixations. Although the parameters of the initial pulse
remained invariant from trial to trial, stimulus variation was
incorporated into the later step phase with each successive tetanic
trial. A regular increase in step frequency (Shall et al., 1996 ) was
used. For example, the first trial began with the 25 msec pulse
followed by 175 msec at 75 Hz. The second trial began with the same
pulse but now followed by 175 msec at 90 Hz. This then continued using
10 Hz increments per trial up to 200 Hz. Tensions reached during the
step phase were compared with those recorded in response to constant
frequency stimulation, at 150 msec after the start of either
stimulation paradigm, to determine whether there was a tension
hysteresis (Shall et al., 1996 ). We define hysteresis as a 5%
or greater difference in tension in response to identical stimulation
frequencies delivered with constant frequency stimulation or during the
step phase of the pulse/step stimulation paradigm (Shall et al.,
1996 ).
Resistance to fatigue was evaluated by a tetanic stimulation paradigm
that incorporated a series of 150 Hz tetanic stimuli at a rate of one
500 msec train per second over a 2 min period (Shall and Goldberg,
1992 , 1995 ). The fatigue index (FI) was determined for each motor unit
examined by calculating the ratio of the tetanic tension measured
during the final and initial cycles. Muscle units that showed <60% of
their initial tension were considered fatigable (Shall and Goldberg,
1992 , 1995 ).
Data analysis. During the experiments all stimulus
artifacts, motoneuron, EMG, and muscle responses were viewed on a
storage oscilloscope and recorded on digital tape for subsequent
quantitative analysis on a digital oscilloscope. The following single
motor unit mechanical parameters were evaluated: twitch tension, twitch contraction time, maximum tetanic tension, fusion frequency, fatigue, and kt value. Motor unit twitch tension and twitch contraction time
were averaged over a minimum of five responses. The motor units were
grouped according to apparent similar mechanical characteristics and
then analyzed by the Student's t test (if there were two
groups) or an ANOVA (for more than two groups) to test the null
hypothesis that the sampled data means of the motor unit groups were equal.
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RESULTS |
Motor unit contractile characteristics
Figure 1 illustrates two single
lateral rectus muscle units. Figure 1A shows an
antidromically identified motoneuron that was stimulated
extracellularly through the recording pipette in the abducens nucleus
to elicit a twitch contraction seen in Figure 1B
(Goldberg et al., 1976 ; Goldberg and Shall, 1997 ). Figure 1, C and D, shows an electromyographic response and
single-muscle unit twitch contraction of a different unit, elicited by
stimulation of an abducens nerve axon with the brush electrode placed
in the brainstem.

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Figure 1.
Motoneuron and muscle unit twitch response of one
unit (A, B) plus EMG and muscle unit
twitch response (C, D) of another unit.
A, Antidromic response of a lateral rectus motoneuron to
abducens nerve stimulation, extracellularly recorded. B,
Single-muscle unit twitch in response to activation of motoneuron in
A through recording electrode (arrow
indicates the time of the action potential of the cell; note
different time scale). C, EMG response to stimulation of
single abducens nerve axon with brush electrode. D,
Simultaneously recorded single-muscle unit twitch response to axonal
stimulation of same unit as in C. Calibration:
B-D, 5.0 msec (horizontal bar);
B, D, 21.0 mg; C, 1.0 mV
(vertical bar).
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A total of 58 motor units were examined in five monkeys, although the
fatigue test was not completed on all of those units. We found no
significant difference between the muscle unit twitch contraction
measures whether single motoneurons were stimulated in the abducens
nucleus with glass micropipettes (11.1 ± 4.9 mg tension and
5.0 ± 0.8 msec contraction time; n = 23, two
animals) or whether single abducens nerve axons were stimulated in the ventral brainstem with the brush electrode (10.2 ± 5.0 mg and 5.4 ± 1.2 msec; n = 35, three animals).
Figure 2 illustrates the distribution of
contraction characteristics we observed. Twitch contraction time and
tension, maximum tetanic tension (using constant frequency
stimulation), and fusion frequency are shown. The distribution of unit
tetanic tensions showed some tendency to separate into three groups
(Fig. 2B): one group from 20 to 60 mg, another from
87 to 200 mg, and the last group exceeding 240 mg of tetanic tension.
Fusion frequency (Fig. 2D) showed a unimodal
distribution, similar to the twitch tension (Fig. 2A)
and twitch contraction time distributions (Fig. 2C).
Nevertheless, the units have been divided into fast ( 190 Hz) and slow
(<190 Hz) categories using the mean of 190 Hz (Shall and Goldberg,
1992 ; Shall et al., 1996 ). See the figure legend for unit numbers and
other statistics.

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Figure 2.
A, Twitch tension among 58 units
( = 10.7 ± 5.02 SD). B, Maximum tetanic
tension among 53 units ( = 186.2 ± 207.7 SD).
C, Twitch contraction time among 58 units ( = 5.2 ± 1.05 SD). D, Fusion frequency among 53 units
( = 190 ± 24 SD).
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Figure 3A illustrates a
scatter plot of the fatigue indices and fusion frequencies of the
muscle unit population. Fatigue showed a bimodal distribution with 17 units classified here as "fatigable" (fatigue index <0.6) and 25 units as fatigue-resistant (fatigue index 0.8). The combination of
motor unit fusion frequency and fatigue was used to classify the units
into four groups (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ). The groups were: FF, fast
fatigable (8); FR, fast fatigue-resistant (12); SF, slow fatigable (9);
and S, slow fatigue-resistant (13). Nontwitch (NT) units (Shall and
Goldberg, 1992 ) were not observed in this study. Figure 5B
indicates that the faster units exhibited a wider range of maximum
tetanic tensions, including most of the more powerful units, than the
slower units. However, both the weaker and more powerful units were
mixed according to fatigue properties, as denoted by the symbols.

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Figure 3.
Graphs of fusion frequency versus fatigue index
(A) and maximum tetanic tension
(B). FF, Fast fatigable;
FR, fast fatigue-resistant; FU, fast
unclassified as to fatigue; SF, slow fatigable;
S, slow; SR, slow
fatigue-resistant; SU, slow unclassified as to
fatigue. Legend also applies to Figures 4 and 5.
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We have previously defined kt value as the slope of the relation
between tetanic tension and series of constant frequency stimulation
trains from 50 Hz up to fusion frequency (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ).
Figure 4 illustrates that relationship
(log-log plot) in the present experiment. In general, more powerful
units (maximum tetanic tensions >240 mg) had lower kt values than the less powerful units and were, for the most part, fast units (9 of
11). Eleven of 14 of the weakest units (maximum tetanic tensions <80 mg) were fatigue-resistant, although mixed according to
contraction speed. In addition, there appeared to be an intermediate
group of 27 units with mixed kt values, tensions, and fatigue
properties.

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Figure 4.
Log-log plot of muscle unit kt value (slope of
the constant frequency stimulation rate from 50 Hz until fusion
frequency vs the resultant forces) versus maximum tetanic tension
(r = 0.99). Average kt value of all units = 1.93 Hz/mg.
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The weaker units generally showed a wider range of step tension to
constant frequency tension ratios (at 100 Hz, Fig.
5A) than the more powerful
units (Fig. 5B). In other words, hysteresis was greatest in
the weaker units, and they were the most fatigue-resistant as well.
Fig. 5C summarizes this data, and it can be seen that the
more powerful units rarely exceed a step tension to constant frequency
tension ratio of two.

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Figure 5.
Muscle unit tetanic responses in a weak
(A) and a powerful (B)
unit. A, 100 Hz constant frequency compared with 100 Hz
step after 500/250 Hz pulse starting at similar baselines.
B, One hundred Hertz constant frequency compared with
100 Hz step after 500/250 Hz pulse starting at similar baselines.
Arrows in A and B indicate
the points at which tensions were compared. C, Maximum
tetanic tension plotted against the ratio of step tension to constant
frequency tension. Note that the weaker units tend to have higher
ratios (greater hysteresis).
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Comparing all units for hysteresis, the tensions at the mid-range
firing frequency of 100 Hz were as follows. Seventy-five percent of the
units had higher tensions (at 100 Hz) after the pulse ( = 115.0 ± 92.0 mg) than they did when stimulated with a constant
frequency ( = 58.2 ± 50.3 mg) (Fig. 5A). In
contrast, 20% of the units had higher tensions (at 100 Hz) during
constant frequency stimulation ( = 65.5 ± 52.0 mg) than
they did after the pulse ( = 37.8 ± 35.0 mg). Five percent
of the units did not show a difference between the two conditions (Fig.
5B) and consequently did not exhibit a tension hysteresis.
Whole-muscle contractile characteristics
We examined whole-muscle force characteristics in six animals and
ocular displacement in four of those six animals. Both sets of
measurements were done by recording the responses of the lateral rectus
muscle to supramaximal stimulation of the whole abducens nerve in the
brainstem. The average twitch tension of the whole muscle was 1.1 ± 0.3 gm with an average twitch contraction time of 6.0 ± 0.8 msec. The average maximum tetanic tension was 13.7 ± 2.6 gm with
an average fusion frequency of 232 ± 46 Hz.
Figure 6 illustrates how this information
was collected. Whole-muscle tetanic tension and ocular displacement
were recorded in response to a series of constant frequency stimulation
trains. We first recorded ocular displacement using the reflective disk and/or search coil with the eye free, and then whole-muscle tension (Goldberg and Shall, 1997 ) was recorded in response to identical stimulation currents and frequencies (see Materials and Methods).

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Figure 6.
Whole lateral rectus muscle tetanic responses in
grams. Degree of eye displacement is included for identical stimulation
parameters in the same muscle. Constant frequency stimulation at 100, 150, 180, and 210 Hz from bottom to top.
Calibration: 50 msec (horizontal bar), 1.84 gm
(vertical bar).
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Figure 7A shows ocular
displacement as a function of tetanic tension, and Figure 7B
shows ocular displacement as a function of stimulation frequency. Grams
per degree and frequency change per degree for each of the four animals
are shown in conjunction with the plotted lines in Figure 7,
A and B, respectively. We saw an average force
change of 0.32 gm/° of ocular displacement and a 4.7 Hz frequency
change per degree of ocular displacement among the animals.

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Figure 7.
A, Whole lateral rectus muscle
tetanic tension versus degree of eye movement in four animals. Note
slope of tension change (grams) per degree for each animal with an
average of 0.32 gm/°. B, Constant frequency
stimulation delivered to the whole sixth nerve versus degree of eye
movement in four animals. Note slope of frequency change per degree for
each animal with an average of 4.7 Hz/°.
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These results on whole-muscle contraction and ocular displacement, when
compared with the motor unit population results, suggest that two motor
units ( = 186.2 mg maximum tetanic tension) contracting maximally would be enough to move the eye 1°. In addition, the average kt value of all the units was 1.93, indicating that a tension
increase of 1 mg could be effected by an ~2 Hz frequency change by an
"average" unit.
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DISCUSSION |
The major findings regarding primate extraocular motor units in
this study were as follows: (1) through the use of the bimodal fatigue
distribution and the mean fusion frequency of the muscle units, the
unit population could be separated into four categories (FF, FR, SF,
and S); (2) the kt value of the units correlated with maximum tetanic
tension, and there was some tendency for maximum tetanic tension of
this unit population to separate into three groups; and (3) the weaker
motor units tended to show the greatest tension hysteresis and
were also generally fatigue-resistant.
The major findings regarding primate whole-muscle force in relation to
"eye movement" were that a force change of 0.32 gm/° of ocular
displacement and a frequency change of 4.7 Hz/° of ocular displacement were observed.
Motor unit classification
Motor unit classification schemes have traditionally used twitch
contraction time (or fusion frequency) and fatigue to define unit
groups (Burke et al., 1973 ; Lennerstrand, 1974a ; Shall and Goldberg,
1992 ). These criteria also appear to be applicable to squirrel monkey
motor units, although neither contraction time nor fusion frequency
were clearly clustered, as in the cat (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ). The
mean fusion frequency (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ) of 190 Hz was used to
divide fast from slow units. The fatigue index did show a clear
difference between groups; those units with a FI of <0.6 were
classified as fatigable, and units with a FI >0.8 were classified as
fatigue-resistant (Fig. 3). Only five units in the current study would
be considered fatigable by the standards (FI 0.25) applied in the
hindlimb (Burke, 1981 ). Because glycogen depletion studies (Burke et
al., 1973 ) have not been done, we can not directly correlate these
physiological "types" with muscle fiber histochemistry or
morphology (Spencer and Porter, 1988 ). It remains to be seen, then,
whether a contraction speed and fatigue-based classification scheme for
extraocular muscle (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ) has relevance to
functional properties, such as an order of recruitment, as has been
shown for the limb musculature (Burke, 1981 , 1990 ). Furthermore,
recently found distinctions in myosin heavy chain isoforms that appear
to show at least three types in extraocular muscle (Lucas and Hoh,
1997 ) may also need to be considered when comparing muscle unit
structure-function relationships.
On the other hand, the weaker group of units was generally more
fatigue-resistant and slower contracting than the more powerful group,
not unlike hindlimb muscle units (Burke, 1981 ). The weaker group also
displayed a greater degree of tension hysteresis than the more powerful
group, and it responded to pulse stimulation with tensions much greater
than maximum tetanic tension (as determined using constant frequency stimulation).
Motor unit comparisons between monkey and cat
The contraction time ( = 5.2 msec) and fusion frequency
( = 190 Hz) of squirrel monkey lateral rectus muscle motor units were faster than those seen in the cat ( = 6.6 msec and = 170 Hz; Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ). Although the average twitch tension of squirrel monkey lateral rectus muscle units was weaker than
in the cat ( = 10.7 mg vs = 30.9 mg), the difference in
maximum tetanic tension was not great ( = 186.2 mg vs = 194.4 mg). The extraocular motor unit contractile forces and speeds we
have reported in the cat (Nelson et al., 1986 ; Goldberg, 1990 ) were
similar to values reported by other investigators (Lennerstrand, 1974a ;
Waldeck et al., 1995 ).
The squirrel monkey lateral rectus muscle appeared to be approximately
one-third the size of the cat lateral rectus muscle on visual
examination during these studies. We are, at present, histologically
examining the squirrel monkey lateral rectus muscle to determine
average muscle fiber diameter, number, and type.
The change in stimulation frequency needed to increase tetanic tension
by 1.0 mg (kt value) was determined for these units and found to be
higher, on average, than it was in the cat ( = 1.93 vs = 1.34). As in the cat, lower kt values in the primate were associated
with more powerful units, whereas high kt units formed a clear
population that consisted of weak units only (Fig. 4). In alert cats
and primates, motoneurons with higher K values (those showing a greater
frequency change for 1° changes in fixated eye position) appeared to
be recruited later at more eccentric eye positions, but their force
characteristics are unknown (Keller, 1981 ; Delgado-Garcia et al., 1986 ;
Fuchs et al., 1988 ). We have suggested previously that if motoneuron K
value is directly related to motor unit kt value then powerful units
might be recruited early in eye movements (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ,
1995 ; Shall et al., 1996 ), but experiments that attempt a direct
comparison of these measures (kt value and K value) have not yet been
done. If a clear relationship were to be found, then investigators
using behaving animals might be able to predict relative motor unit force from motoneuron K value alone.
Hysteresis
Are the motoneuron firing rates and force levels identical when
the eye reaches a particular fixation point, regardless of the initial
position of the eye? At the motor unit level, 75% of the units studied
had an average tension (at a constant frequency of 100 Hz) after the
high-frequency pulse that was nearly double that seen with constant
frequency stimulation alone. Twenty percent of the units had an average
tension that was ~42% less after the pulse than they did with
constant frequency stimulation. In comparison, as the eye reached
primary position from either the "on" or "off" field of a
particular motoneuron, the average difference observed in motoneuron
firing rate was ~5% (Goldstein and Robinson, 1986 ). This firing rate
inequality, at identical eye positions, was termed a motoneuron firing
rate hysteresis (Eckmiller, 1974 ). We cannot yet be sure how the
relatively small hysteresis in motoneuron firing rate correlates to the
large single muscle unit force hysteresis, but the relationship does
not appear to be linear. Continued examination of hysteresis in the
precise eye movement system of the primate would seem warranted.
Whole muscle
Stimulation of the whole abducens nerve in the brainstem was done
using 200 msec stimulus trains with various constant frequencies (Fig.
6) to measure the resultant contractile forces as well as ocular
displacements. The finding that an average of ~320 mg was needed to
displace the eye by 1° compares favorably with the 430 mg that has
been reported in humans during active contraction (Robinson et al.,
1969 ), despite the obvious differences in eye size and mass. A change
of ~1.0 gm/° has been noted in other studies (Fuchs and Luschei,
1971 ; Collins et al., 1981 ). In addition, it took an average frequency
increase of 4.7 Hz to displace the eye 1° in this study, and that
value compares reasonably with the 7.5 Hz/° (although eye
displacement was not measured directly) that can be approximated from
the data presented by Fuchs and Luschei (1971) in the Maccaca
mulatta.
The current whole-muscle force data (320 mg/°), when compared with
the motor unit data ( = 186.2 mg maximum tetanic tension), appears to indicate that as few as two or three motor units might be
able to move the eye a full 1°.
Motor units and the whole muscle
We have previously shown in the cat (2.5 to 3.5 kg animals)
lateral rectus muscle that the twitch and tetanic contractile forces
elicited in response to stimulation of the whole abducens nerve are
below what would be expected if one multiplied the average force of the
motor units (i.e., twitch tension 29.0 mg and maximum tetanic
tension 194.0 mg) by the known number of lateral rectus motoneurons
(n 1,100) in the cat abducens nucleus (Shall and Goldberg, 1992 ; Goldberg et al., 1997b ; Goldberg and Shall, 1997 ). In
summary, ~15.0 gm of twitch force (Barmack et al., 1971 ; Goldberg et
al., 1997b ) and ~110.0 gm of tetanic force (Cooper and Eccles, 1930 ;
Barmack et al., 1971 ; Goldberg and Shall, 1997 ) have been observed
when, instead, one would "expect" ~29.0 gm of twitch force
(Goldberg et al., 1997b ) and 237.0 gm of tetanic force (Goldberg and
Shall, 1997 ).
Possible reasons for the apparent loss of "expected" force,
delineated above, need to be addressed. It has been shown that the cat
lateral rectus muscle is composed of serially arranged and branching
muscle fibers rather than having all its fibers arranged in parallel
arrays (Mayr et al., 1975 ; Alvarado-Mallart and Pinçon-Raymond,
1976 ). Other investigators have speculated that such an arrangement
could lead to a loss of expected force when the muscle contracts (Katz,
1939 ; Demieville and Partridge, 1980 ; Goldberg et al., 1997b ). Other
skeletal muscles have been shown to have serially arranged and
interdigitated fibers as well, and such arrangements could
significantly alter the contractile properties of a motor unit as it
acts in concert with other units (Loeb et al., 1987 ; Ounjian et al.,
1991 ; Roy et al., 1995 ; Trotter et al., 1995 ).
We now report an average 1.1 gm of twitch force and 13.7 gm of tetanic
force in the squirrel monkey (0.7-1.1 kg animals) elicited by
supramaximal stimulation of the whole abducens nerve. Similarly, whole-muscle maximum twitch and tetanic forces have been observed using
nerve stimulation in larger primates. Fuchs and Luschei (1971) showed a
3.5 gm twitch and an average of 57.0 gm of tetanic force using 3-4 kg
Maccaca mulattas, and in adult humans with motoneuron
estimates of ~5000 (Harley, 1942 ; Tomasch, 1973 ; Vijayashankar and
Brody, 1977 ) tetanic forces were <95 gm during eye movements (Robinson
et al., 1969 ; Collins et al., 1975 , 1981 ). It appears then, that the
whole-muscle forces in the current experiment are in line (adjusting
for animal size) with what has been found previously in other primates.
It remains to be seen whether primate extraocular muscle will show
nonparallel arrays of muscle fibers as found in the cat (Mayr et al.,
1975 ; Alvarado-Mallart and Pinçon-Raymond, 1976 ) and whether the
summation of motor unit forces will sum to equal the observed
whole-muscle forces. In addition, we also may need to account for the
pronounced hysteresis in single motor unit force. These possible
intricacies in the final common pathway may cause us to reconsider how
the precise motoneuronal firing patterns that have been observed in
alert animals during eye movements are translated into stable and
repeatable saccades, pursuit, and fixations.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 29, 1998; revised Sept. 24, 1998; accepted Sept. 24, 1998.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health-National Eye
Institute Grant EY11249. We thank S. M. Highstein for his advice
on surgery and anesthesia. We thank Ying Guo and Mary Ellen White for
their technical assistance and J. Ross McClung for critically reading
this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Stephen J. Goldberg, Virginia
Commonwealth University, Medical College of Virginia, Department of
Anatomy, P.O. Box 980709, Richmond, VA 23298-0709.
 |
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