The effects of repeated rehabilitation "tune-ups" on functional recovery after focal ischemia in rats.

Neurorehabil Neural Repair

BioMedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John's, Newfoundland, Canada.

Published: November 2009

Background: For most stroke survivors, rehabilitation therapy is the only treatment option available. The beneficial effects of early rehabilitation on neuroplasticity and functional recovery have been modeled in experimental stroke using a combination of enriched environment and rehabilitation. However, the impact of a secondary intervention, such as a periodic return to therapy, remains unclear.

Objective: This study examines whether a return to enriched rehabilitation (ie, "tune-up") can further promote functional recovery or produce beneficial changes in brain plasticity in the chronic phase of stroke recovery.

Methods: Rats were exposed to focal ischemia (endothelin-1 applied to forelimb sensorimotor cortex and dorsolateral striatum) and allowed to recover either in standard housing or in a combination of enriched environment and rehabilitative reaching for 9 weeks. Animals were then exposed to rotating periods of standard housing (5 weeks) and intensive "tune-up" therapy consisting of various sensorimotor/cognitive activities (2 weeks). Functional recovery was assessed using the Montoya staircase, beam-traversing, and cylinder tests, and Golgi-Cox analysis was used to examine dendritic complexity in the contralesional forelimb motor cortex.

Results: Although early enriched rehabilitation significantly improved sensorimotor function in both the beam and staircase tests, "tune-up" therapy had no effect on recovery. Golgi-Cox analysis revealed no effect of treatment on dendritic complexity.

Conclusions: This study reaffirms the benefits of early rehabilitation for functional recovery after stroke. However, "tune-up" therapy provided no benefit in ischemic animals regardless of earlier rehabilitation experience. It is possible that alternative approaches in the chronic phase may prove more effective.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1545968309341067DOI Listing

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