Task-specificity vs. ceiling effect: Step-training in shallow water after spinal cord injury

被引:68
作者
Kuerzi, J. [2 ]
Brown, E. H. [2 ]
Shum-Siu, A.
Siu, A.
Burke, D.
Morehouse, J.
Smith, R. R.
Magnuson, D. S. K. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Sch Med, Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Res Ctr, Dept Neurol Surg, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
[2] Univ Louisville, Sch Med, Dept Anat Sci & Neurobiol, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
关键词
Spinal cord injury; Locomotor training; Activity-based rehabilitation; Task-specificity; Kinematics; ADULT-RAT; FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY; CONTUSION INJURIES; LOCOMOTOR FUNCTION; GAIT ANALYSIS; IN-VITRO; REHABILITATION; TRANSECTION; STIMULATION; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1016/j.expneurol.2010.03.008
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 [神经生物学];
摘要
While activity-based rehabilitation is one of the most promising therapeutic approaches for spinal cord injury, the necessary components for optimal locomotor retraining have not yet been determined. Currently, a number of different activity-based approaches are being investigated including body weight-supported treadmill training (with and without manual assistance), robotically-assisted treadmill training, bicycling and swimming, among others. We recently showed, in the adult rat, that intensive rehabilitation based on swimming brought about significant improvements in hindlimb performance during swimming but did not alter the normal course of recovery of over-ground walking (Smith et al., 2006a,b, 2009). However, swimming lacks the phasic limb-loading and plantar cutaneous feedback thought to be important for weight-supported Step training. SO, we are investigating an innovative approach based on walking in shallow water where buoyancy provides some body weight support and balance while still allowing for limb-loading and appropriate cutaneous afferent feedback during retraining. Thus, the aim of this study is to determine if spinal cord injured animals show improved overground locomotion following intensive body weight-supported locomotor training in shallow water. The results show that training in shallow water successfully improved stepping in shallow water, but was notable to bring about significant improvements in overground locomotion despite the fact that the shallow water provides sufficient body weight support to allow acutely injured rats to generate frequent plantar stepping. These observations support previous suggestions that incompletely injured animals retrain themselves while moving about in their cages and that daily training regimes are not able to improve upon this already substantial functional improvement due to a ceiling effect, rather than task-specificity, per se. These results also support the concept that moderately-severe thoracic contusion injuries decrease the capacity for body weight support, but do not decrease the capacity for pattern generation. In contrast, animals with severe contusion injuries could not support their body weight nor could they generate a locomotor pattern when provided with body weight support via buoyancy. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:178 / 187
页数:10
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]
RECOVERY OF LOCOMOTION AFTER CHRONIC SPINALIZATION IN THE ADULT CAT [J].
BARBEAU, H ;
ROSSIGNOL, S .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1987, 412 (01) :84-95
[2]
A SENSITIVE AND RELIABLE LOCOMOTOR RATING-SCALE FOR OPEN-FIELD TESTING IN RATS [J].
BASSO, DM ;
BEATTIE, MS ;
BRESNAHAN, JC .
JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 1995, 12 (01) :1-21
[3]
MASCIS evaluation of open field locomotor scores: Effects of experience and teamwork on reliability [J].
Basso, DM ;
Beattie, MS ;
Bresnahan, JC ;
Anderson, DK ;
Faden, AI ;
Gruner, JA ;
Holford, TR ;
Hsu, CY ;
Noble, LJ ;
Nockels, R ;
Perot, PL ;
Salzman, SK ;
Young, W .
JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 1996, 13 (07) :343-359
[4]
Contribution of cutaneous inputs from the hindpaw to the control of locomotion. II. Spinal cats [J].
Bouyer, LJG ;
Rossignol, S .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 90 (06) :3640-3653
[5]
Neurotrophic factors promote and enhance locomotor recovery in untrained spinalized cats [J].
Boyce, Vanessa S. ;
Tumolo, Maureen ;
Fischer, Itzhak ;
Murray, Marion ;
Lemay, Michel A. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2007, 98 (04) :1988-1996
[6]
Locomotor ability in spinal rats is dependent on the amount of activity imposed on the hindlimbs during treadmill training [J].
Cha, John ;
Heng, Chad ;
Reinkensmeyer, David J. ;
Roy, Roland R. ;
Edgerton, V. Reggie ;
De Leon, Ray D. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2007, 24 (06) :1000-1012
[7]
Gait analysis of adult paraplegic rats after spinal cord repair [J].
Cheng, HR ;
Almström, S ;
Giménez-Llort, L ;
Chang, R ;
Ogren, SO ;
Hoffer, B ;
Olson, L .
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1997, 148 (02) :544-557
[8]
Transformation of nonfunctional spinal circuits into functional states after the loss of brain input [J].
Courtine, Gregoire ;
Gerasimenko, Yury ;
van den Brand, Rubia ;
Yew, Aileen ;
Musienko, Pavel ;
Zhong, Hui ;
Song, Bingbing ;
Ao, Yan ;
Ichiyama, Ronaldo M. ;
Lavrov, Igor ;
Roy, Roland R. ;
Sofroniew, Michael V. ;
Edgerton, V. Reggie .
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 12 (10) :1333-U167
[9]
A COMPARISON OF MOTOR PATTERNS INDUCED BY N-METHYL-D-ASPARTATE, ACETYLCHOLINE AND SEROTONIN IN THE IN-VITRO NEONATAL RAT SPINAL-CORD [J].
COWLEY, KC ;
SCHMIDT, BJ .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1994, 171 (1-2) :147-150
[10]
Dietz V, 2004, ACT NEUR S, V89, P95