AI Article Synopsis

  • Most bipeds and quadrupeds can walk in different directions, and their walking direction is influenced by the limb movements relative to their body.
  • A study with decerebrate cats on a treadmill examined how brain and spinal cord stimulation impacted their stepping direction.
  • It was found that spinal cord stimulation allowed for coordinated stepping in multiple directions, while brain stimulation primarily facilitated forward walking, indicating that the brain acts as a main control center for this type of locomotion.

Article Abstract

Most bipeds and quadrupeds, in addition to forward walking, are also capable of backward and sideward walking. The direction of walking is determined by the direction of stepping movements of individual limbs in relation to the front-to-rear body axis. Our goal was to assess the functional organization of the system controlling the direction of stepping. Experiments were performed on decerebrate cats walking on the treadmill with their hindlimbs, whereas the head and trunk were rigidly fixed. Different directions of the treadmill motion relative to the body axis were used (0, ± 45, ± 90, and 180°). For each direction, we compared locomotion evoked from the brainstem (by stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region, MLR) with locomotion evoked by epidural stimulation of the spinal cord (SC). It was found that SC stimulation evoked well coordinated stepping movements at different treadmill directions. The direction of steps was opposite to the treadmill motion, suggesting that this direction was determined by sensory input from the limb during stance. Thus, SC stimulation activates limb controllers, which are able to generate stepping movements in different directions. By contrast, MLR stimulation evoked well coordinated stepping movements only if the treadmill was moving in the front-to-rear direction. One can conclude that supraspinal commands (caused by MLR stimulation) select one of the numerous forms of operation of the spinal limb controllers, namely, the forward walking. The MLR can thus be considered as a command center for forward locomotion, which is the main form of progression in bipeds and quadrupeds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3521535PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3757-12.2012DOI Listing

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