AI Article Synopsis

  • Recovery of neurologic function after spinal cord injury (SCI) occurs naturally over time in both humans and animals, with the study focused on upper limb somatosensory potentials (SSEPs) after cervical contusions.
  • The research utilized male rats with C5-6 contusions and employed electrophysiological techniques to track the recovery of SSEPs over a period of days, noting significant changes suggesting remyelination.
  • Findings indicated that despite damage to the dorsal column, primary afferent terminals remained intact in the cuneate nuclei, supporting the idea that these structures play a crucial role in restoring sensory function post-injury.

Article Abstract

Varying degrees of neurologic function spontaneously recovers in humans and animals during the days and months after spinal cord injury (SCI). For example, abolished upper limb somatosensory potentials (SSEPs) and cutaneous sensations can recover in persons post-contusive cervical SCI. To maximize recovery and the development/evaluation of repair strategies, a better understanding of the anatomical locations and physiological processes underlying spontaneous recovery after SCI is needed. As an initial step, the present study examined whether recovery of upper limb SSEPs after contusive cervical SCI was due to the integrity of some spared dorsal column primary afferents that terminate within the cuneate nucleus and not one of several alternate routes. C5-6 contusions were performed on male adult rats. Electrophysiological techniques were used in the same rat to determine forelimb evoked neuronal responses in both cortex (SSEPs) and the cuneate nucleus (terminal extracellular recordings). SSEPs were not evoked 2 days post-SCI but were found at 7 days and beyond, with an observed change in latencies between 7 and 14 days (suggestive of spared axon remyelination). Forelimb evoked activity in the cuneate nucleus at 15 but not 3 days post-injury occurred despite dorsal column damage throughout the cervical injury (as seen histologically). Neuroanatomical tracing (using 1% unconjugated cholera toxin B subunit) confirmed that upper limb primary afferent terminals remained within the cuneate nuclei. Taken together, these results indicate that neural transmission between dorsal column primary afferents and cuneate nuclei neurons is likely involved in the recovery of upper limb SSEPs after contusive cervical SCI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2141689PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.expneurol.2007.06.012DOI Listing

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