AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined how spinal sensorimotor circuits in cats interact with other body inputs to manage walking, focusing on how spinal cord injuries disrupt these processes.
  • - After performing staggered injuries on the spinal cord, the researchers found that cats could recover some quadrupedal movement but needed help with balance, and their limb coordination became less stable.
  • - Despite significant challenges to coordination and posture after injuries, cats showed quick recovery of hindlimb movement, highlighting the importance of lumbar spinal circuits in regaining locomotion.

Article Abstract

Spinal sensorimotor circuits interact with supraspinal and peripheral inputs to generate quadrupedal locomotion. Ascending and descending spinal pathways ensure coordination between the forelimbs and hindlimbs. Spinal cord injury (SCI) disrupts these pathways. To investigate the control of interlimb coordination and hindlimb locomotor recovery, we performed two lateral thoracic hemisections on opposite sides of the cord (right T5-T6 and left T10-T11) at an interval of approximately two months in eight adult cats. In three cats, the spinal cord was transected at T12-T13. We collected electromyography (EMG) and kinematic data during quadrupedal and hindlimb-only locomotion before and after spinal lesions. We show that (1) cats spontaneously recover quadrupedal locomotion following staggered hemisections but require balance assistance after the second one, (2) coordination between the forelimbs and hindlimbs displays 2:1 patterns (two cycles of one forelimb within one hindlimb cycle) and becomes weaker and more variable after both hemisections, (3) left-right asymmetries in hindlimb stance and swing durations appear after the first hemisection and reverse after the second, and (4) support periods reorganize after staggered hemisections to favor support involving both forelimbs and diagonal limbs. Cats expressed hindlimb locomotion the day following spinal transection, indicating that lumbar sensorimotor circuits play a prominent role in hindlimb locomotor recovery after staggered hemisections. These results reflect a series of changes in spinal sensorimotor circuits that allow cats to maintain and recover some level of quadrupedal locomotor functionality with diminished motor commands from the brain and cervical cord, although the control of posture and interlimb coordination remains impaired.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10288532PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0191-23.2023DOI Listing

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