AI Article Synopsis

  • Prior research indicates that the timing of electrical stimulation (fixed vs. variable) affects spinal cord plasticity, with fixed timing having a protective effect compared to variable timing, which impairs learning in spinally transected animals.
  • A study with spinally transected rats revealed that a minimum of 540 shocks is necessary for the protective effects of fixed timing stimulation, while shorter exposures can hinder learning.
  • The findings suggest that repeated fixed timing stimulation can have lasting effects on learning capacity, hinting at the spinal system's ability to recognize and remember specific patterns of stimulation for rehabilitation purposes.

Article Abstract

Prior studies have shown that intermittent noxious stimulation has divergent effects on spinal cord plasticity depending upon whether it occurs in a regular (fixed time, FT) or irregular (variable time, VT) manner: In spinally transected animals, VT stimulation to the tail or hind leg impaired spinal learning whereas an extended exposure to FT stimulation had a restorative/protective effect. These observations imply that lower level systems are sensitive to temporal relations. Using spinally transected rats, it is shown that the restorative effect of FT stimulation emerges after 540 shocks; fewer shocks generate a learning impairment. The transformative effect of FT stimulation is related to the number of shocks administered, not the duration of exposure. Administration of 360 FT shocks induces a learning deficit that lasts 24 h. If a second bout of FT stimulation is given a day after the first, it restores the capacity to learn. This savings effect implies that the initial training episode had a lasting (memory-like) effect. Two bouts of shock have a transformative effect when applied at different locations or at difference frequencies, implying spinal systems abstract and store an index of regularity (rather than a specific interval). Implications of the results for step training and rehabilitation after injury are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4612497PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00274DOI Listing

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