Golgi Tendon Organ
What is Golgi organ? Where is it located and what is its function? Read on to know the answers to all of these questions and more...

Golgi Tendon Organ Anatomy
This structure is made up of strands of collagen which are connected at one end to the muscle fibers and at the other merge with the tendon proper. Each tendon organ is innervated by a single afferent sensory fiber which branches and terminates as spiral endings around the collagen strands. The afferent axon is a myelinated axon that has a large diameter. Each neurotendinous spindle is enclosed in a fibrous capsule that contains a number of enlarged tendon fasciculi, which is, intrafusal fasciculi. One or more nerve fibers perforate the side of the capsule and lose their medullary sheaths, the axis-cylinders subdivide and terminate between the tendon fibers in irregular discs or varicosities.
Golgi Tendon Organ Function
When the muscle generates force, the sensory terminals get compressed. This stretching tends to deform the terminals of the afferent axon, opening stretch-sensitive cation channels. As a result, the axon is depolarized and fires nerve impulses which are propagated to the spinal cord. This action potential frequency signals the force being developed by the ten to twenty motor units within the muscle. This is actually representative of the entire muscle force.
The sensory feedback tends to generate spinal reflexes and supraspinal responses which control the extent of muscle contraction. The afferent synapses with interneurons within the spinal cord that also project to the brain cerebellum and the cerebral cortex. One of the main spinal reflexes associated with this afferent nerve is the autogenic inhibition reflex, which helps regulate the force of muscle contraction. Initially, it was thought that tendon organs had a high threshold only becoming active when there are high muscle forces. Eventually, it was thought that tendon organ input caused a kind of 'weightlifting failure' through the clasp-knife reflex. This protects the muscle and tendons from excessive force. During locomotion the afferent input excites rather than inhibits motoneurons of the receptor-bearing muscles and it also affects the timing of the transitions between the stance and swing phases of locomotion. Thus, the switch to autogenic excitation is a form of positive feedback.
The action of Golgi organ is of particular interest to weightlifters who want to steadily increase the amount of weight that they can handle while muscle building. Some say that forcing the muscles to do additional repetitions with the help of very heavy weights could train the muscles to fail in future lift attempts. However, others claim that this is not likely because of the way the Golgi organ responds to muscle tension and reports this information to the brain. It is claimed that muscle stretching would also pull on the tendons and stimulate the Golgi tendon organ's afferent. Most of the force of a stretch is absorbed by the muscle itself, so a muscle contraction is actually a much better stimulus for the Golgi tendon.
This is an important structure that is present at the junction of muscles and tendons as it is a proprioceptor that is sensitive to changes in muscle tension and the rate of change of muscle tension.
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