Abstract
The objective of the present study was to investigate the effects of rhythmic arm swing on ipsilateral and contralateral soleus motoneuron pool excitability. Ten healthy human subjects participated in this study. Soleus H-reflexes were recorded from the ipsilateral and contralateral soleus muscles while the subject swung the right arm anteroposteriorly as if during gait. The soleus H-reflex was depressed throughout the whole arm swing cycle except in the ipsilateral leg during the onset of the backward arm swing, and in the contralateral leg during the last half of the backward arm swing and the onset of the forward arm swing. The depression was cyclically modulated in accordance with the time course of the arm swing periods, and the pattern of the modulation was reciprocal between the ipsilateral and contralateral legs. This cyclical and reciprocal modulation may be related to the regulation of soleus motoneuron pool excitability during gait.