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Locomotor training alters the behavior of flexor reflexes during walking in human spinal cord injury. | LitMetric

Locomotor training alters the behavior of flexor reflexes during walking in human spinal cord injury.

J Neurophysiol

Sensory Motor Performance Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Northwestern University Feinberg Medical School, Chicago, Illinois; Graduate Center/The City University of New York, New York, New York; and Department of Physical Therapy, College of Staten Island, Staten Island, New York

Published: November 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic spinal cord injury impacts reflex excitability, with early flexor reflexes being reduced and late reflexes heightened.
  • Locomotor training over 44 sessions was tested on nine individuals with SCI, aiming to change reflex behaviors.
  • Results indicated that training reinstated early flexor reflexes and modified both early and late reflexes during walking, suggesting the nervous system's ability to adapt and improve post-injury.

Article Abstract

In humans, a chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) impairs the excitability of pathways mediating early flexor reflexes and increases the excitability of late, long-lasting flexor reflexes. We hypothesized that in individuals with SCI, locomotor training will alter the behavior of these spinally mediated reflexes. Nine individuals who had either chronic clinically motor complete or incomplete SCI received an average of 44 locomotor training sessions. Flexor reflexes, elicited via sural nerve stimulation of the right or left leg, were recorded from the ipsilateral tibialis anterior (TA) muscle before and after body weight support (BWS)-assisted treadmill training. The modulation pattern of the ipsilateral TA responses following innocuous stimulation of the right foot was also recorded in 10 healthy subjects while they stepped at 25% BWS to investigate whether body unloading during walking affects the behavior of these responses. Healthy subjects did not receive treadmill training. We observed a phase-dependent modulation of early TA flexor reflexes in healthy subjects with reduced body weight during walking. The early TA flexor reflexes were increased at heel contact, progressively decreased during the stance phase, and then increased throughout the swing phase. In individuals with SCI, locomotor training induced the reappearance of early TA flexor reflexes and changed the amplitude of late TA flexor reflexes during walking. Both early and late TA flexor reflexes were modulated in a phase-dependent pattern after training. These new findings support the adaptive capability of the injured nervous system to return to a prelesion excitability and integration state.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00308.2014DOI Listing

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