One of the most promising rehabilitation strategies for spinal cord injury is weight-supported treadmill training. This strategy seeks to re-train the spinal cord below the level of injury to generate a meaningful pattern of movement. However, the number of step cycles that can be accomplished is limited by the poor weight-bearing capability of the neuromuscular system after injury. We have begun to study swimming as a rehabilitation strategy that allows for high numbers of steps and a high step-cycle frequency in a standard rat model of contusive spinal cord injury. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effect of swimming as a rehabilitation strategy in rats with contusion injuries at T9. We used a swimming strategy with or without cutaneous feedback based on original work in the chick by Muir and colleagues. Adult female rats (n=27) received moderately-severe contusion injuries at T9. Walking and swimming performance were evaluated using the Open-Field Locomotor Scale (BBB; Basso et al., 1995) and a novel swimming assessment, the Louisville Swimming Scale (LSS). Rats that underwent swim-training with or without cutaneous feedback showed a significant improvement in hindlimb function during swimming compared to untrained animals. Rats that underwent swim-training without cutaneous feedback showed less improvement than those trained with cutaneous feedback. Rats in the non-swimming group demonstrated little improvement over the course of the study. All three groups showed the expected improvement in over-ground walking and had similar terminal BBB scores. These findings suggest that animals re-acquire the ability to swim only if trained and that cutaneous feedback improves the re-training process. Further, these data suggest that the normal course of recovery of over-ground walking following moderately-severe contusion injuries at T9 is the result of a re-training process.
While activity-based rehabilitation is one of the most promising therapeutic approaches for spinal cord injury, the necessary components for optimal locomotor retraining have not yet been determined. Currently, a number of different activity-based approaches are being investigated including body weight-supported treadmill training (with and without manual assistance), robotically-assisted treadmill training, bicycling and swimming, among others. We recently showed, in the adult rat, that intensive rehabilitation based on swimming brought about significant improvements in hindlimb performance during swimming but did not alter the normal course of recovery of over-ground walking . However, swimming lacks the phasic limb-loading and plantar cutaneous feedback thought to be important for weight-supported step training. So, we are investigating an innovative approach based on walking in shallow water where buoyancy provides some body weight support and balance while still allowing for limb-loading and appropriate cutaneous afferent feedback during retraining. Thus, the aim of this study is to determine if spinal cord injured animals show improved overground locomotion following intensive body-weight supported locomotor training in shallow water. The results show that training in shallow water successfully improved stepping in shallow water, but was not able to bring about significant improvements in overground locomotion despite the fact that the shallow water provides sufficient body weight support to allow acutely injured rats to generate frequent plantar stepping. These observations support previous suggestions that incompletely injured animals retrain themselves while moving about in their cages and that daily training regimes are not able to improve upon this already substantial functional improvement due to a ceiling effect, rather than task-specificity, per se. These results also support the concept that moderately-severe thoracic contusion injuries decrease the capacity for body weight support, but do not decrease the capacity for pattern generation. In contrast, animals with severe contusion injuries could not support their body weight nor could they generate a locomotor pattern when provided with body weight support via buoyancy.
The ventrolateral funiculus (VLF) in the spinal cord contains important ascending and descending pathways related to locomotion and interlimb coordination. The primary purpose of this descriptive study was to investigate the distribution of inter-enlargement pathways in the adult rat spinal cord with an emphasis on the VLF.We made discrete unilateral injections of Fluoro-Gold (FG) into the right VLF at T9, and either unilateral or bilateral injections of Fluoro-Ruby (FR) into the intermediate gray matter at the C5-6, C7-8, or L2 segmental levels. Inter-enlargement neurons with ascending axons in the right VLF were found bilaterally in laminae VII and VIII throughout the rostral lumbar spinal cord (L1-L3) and predominately contralaterally in the caudal lumbosacral (L4-S1) spinal cord. Following left unilateral FR injections at C5-6 or C7-8 and right unilateral VLF injections of FG at T9, very few double-labeled neurons could be found anywhere in the lumbar spinal cord. Similar injections of FR at L2 revealed an almost symmetrical bilateral distribution of double-labeled neurons throughout the cervical spinal cord (C1-C8).These results describe ascending and descending pathways within the spinal cord that interconnect the two enlargements and involve both commissural and ipsilateral interneurons. The majority of inter-enlargement neurons had axons within the ventrolateral funiculus at T9. These observations support the hypothesis that the VLF contains long ascending and descending axons with propriospinal inter-enlargement, commissural and ipsilateral connections that are anatomically well-suited to mediate interlimb coordination. Keywordspropriospinal pathways; interlimb coordination; Fluoro-Gold; Fluoro-Ruby There is renewed interest of late in propriospinal pathways due in part to reports of the spontaneous formation of new functional intraspinal circuitry following spinal cord injury (Bareyre et al., 2004) and the potential these pathways have in combinatorial repair strategies involving cellular transplantation and neurotrophin delivery (Jordan and Schmidt, 2002;Conta and Stelzner, 2004;Fouad et al., 2005). While many regions of the spinal cord possess the neural circuitry necessary to produce rhythmic activity, in the mammalian quadruped, separate central pattern generator (CPG) networks are thought to exist for the hindlimbs and forelimbs (Cazalets et al., 1995(Cazalets et al., , 1996Magnuson and Trinder, 1997; Correspondence to: David S.K. Magnuson, PhD, Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Louisville School of Medicine, 210 E. Grey St., Ste. 1102, Louisville, KY 40202, dsmagn01@louisville.edu, Phone (502) 852-6551, Fax (502) Magnuson et al., 1999;Ballion et al., 2001;Juvin et al., 2005). In the rat, intraspinal Kainic Acid injections have profound effects on locomotor function when delivered to the intermediate gray matter at L2 (Magnuson et al., 1999) and locomotor deficits resulting from moderately-severe contusion injuries are greater when the contusion is centered on the m...
The majority of animal studies examining the recovery of function following spinal cord injury use the BBB Open-Field Locomotor Scale as a primary outcome measure. However, it is now well known that rehabilitation strategies can bring about significant improvements in hindlimb function in some animal models. Thus, improvements in walking following spinal cord injury in rats may be influenced by differences in activity levels and housing conditions during the first few weeks post-injury. Swimming is a natural form of locomotion that animals are not normally exposed to in the laboratory setting. We hypothesized that deficits in, and functional recovery of, swimming would accurately represent the locomotor capability of the nervous system in the absence of any retraining effects. To test this hypothesis, we have compared the recovery of walking and swimming in rats following a range of standardized spinal cord injuries and two different retraining strategies. In order to assess swimming, we developed a rating system we call the Louisville Swimming Scale (LSS) that evaluates three characteristics of swimming that are highly altered by spinal cord injury-namely, hindlimb movement, forelimb dependency, and body position. The data indicate that the LSS is a sensitive and reliable method of determining swimming ability and the improvement in hindlimb function after standardized contusion injury of the thoracic spinal cord. Furthermore, the data suggests that when used in conjunction with the BBB Open-field Locomotor Scale, the LSS assesses locomotor capabilities that are not influenced by a retraining effect.
Background Locomotor training of rats with thoracic contusion spinal cord injuries can induce task-specific changes in stepping but rarely results in improved overground locomotion, possibly due to a ceiling effect. Thus, the authors hypothesize that incompletely injured rats maximally retrain themselves while moving about in their cages over the first few weeks postinjury. Objective To test the hypothesis using hindlimb immobilization after mild thoracic contusion spinal cord injury in adult female rats. A passive stretch protocol was included as an independent treatment. Methods Wheelchairs were used to hold the hindlimbs stationary in an extended position leaving the forelimbs free. The wheelchairs were used for 15 to 18 hours per day, 5 days per week for 8 weeks, beginning at 4 days postinjury. A 20-minute passive hindlimb stretch therapy was applied to half of the animals. Results Hindlimb locomotor function of the wheelchair group was not different from controls at 1 week postinjury but declined significantly over the next 4 weeks. Passive stretch had no influence on wheelchair animals but limited functional recovery of normally housed animals, preventing them from regaining forelimb–hindlimb coordination. Following 8 weeks of wheelchair immobilization and stretch therapy, only the wheelchair group displayed an improvement in function when returned to normal housing but retained significant deficits in stepping and coordination out to 16 weeks. Conclusion Hindlimb immobilization and passive stretch may hinder or conceal the normal course of functional recovery of spinal cord injured rats. These observations have implications for the management of acute clinical spinal cord injuries.
Background Stretching is a widely accepted standard-of-care therapy following spinal cord injury that has not been systematically studied in animal models. Objective To investigate the influence of a daily stretch-based physical therapy program on locomotor recovery in adult rats with moderate T9 contusive SCI. Methods A randomized treatment and control study of stretching in an animal model of acute spinal cord injury (SCI). Moderate spinal cord injuries were delivered with the NYU Impactor. Daily stretching (30 min./day, 5 days/wk for 8 wks) was provided by a team of animal handlers. Hindlimb function was assessed using the BBB Open Field Locomotor Scale and kinematically. Passive range-of-motion for each joint was determined weekly using a goniometer. Results Declines in hindlimb function during overground stepping were observed for the first 4 weeks. BBB scores improved weeks 5–10 but remained below the control group. Stretched animals had significant deficits in knee passive ROM starting at week 4 and for the duration of the study. Kinematic assessment showed decreased joint excursion during stepping that partially recovered beginning at week 5. Conclusion Stretch-based therapy significantly impaired functional recovery in adult rats with a moderate contusive SCI at T10. The negative impact on function was greatest acutely, but persisted even after the stretching ceased at 8 weeks post-injury.
In the mammalian spinal cord, the ventrolateral funiculus (VLF) has been identified as critical to postural control and locomotor function, in part due to the reticulospinal pathways it contains. The primary purpose of this descriptive study was to investigate the distribution of neurons in the medulla labeled retrogradely from the VLF and the intermediate gray matter of specific lumbar and cervical spinal cord segments in the adult rat.We made discrete injections of Fluoro-Ruby (FR) into the intermediate gray matter at the cervical (C) 5/6, 7/8 or lumbar (L) 2 segmental levels followed by a single injection of Fluoro-Gold (FG) into the right VLF at T9. Double-labeled medullary neurons were found primarily in the gigantocellular group of nuclei (Gi), distributed both ipsilaterally and contralaterally following cervical or lumbar FR injections. In addition, a substantial population of neurons contained within the vestibular group of nuclei was double labeled both ipsilaterally and contralaterally. We also identified a substantial population of Gi-related neurons located ipsilateral to the VLF injections that were double labeled following left unilateral FR injections at C5/6, C7/8 or L2.These results describe a substantial population of ipsilateral and commissural medullary neurons that project to both cervical and thoracolumbar segments. Two different populations of commissural neurons are described, one with axons that cross the midline rostral to T9, and one with axons that cross the midline caudal to T9. These observations provide strong additional evidence for a pattern of reticulo-and vestibulospinal projections that include substantial numbers of commissural neurons and project to multiple cervical and thoracolumbar levels.
After spinal cord injury (SCI) muscle contractures develop in the plegic limbs of many patients. Physical therapists commonly use stretching as an approach to avoid contractures and to maintain the extensibility of soft tissues. We found previously that a daily stretching protocol has a negative effect on locomotor recovery in rats with mild thoracic SCI. The purpose of the current study was to determine the effects of stretching on locomotor function at acute and chronic time points after moderately severe contusive SCI. Female Sprague-Dawley rats with 25 g-cm T10 contusion injuries received our standard 24-min stretching protocol starting 4 days (acutely) or 10 weeks (chronically) post-injury (5 days/week for 5 or 4 weeks, respectively). Locomotor function was assessed using the BBB (Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan) Open Field Locomotor Scale, video-based kinematics, and gait analysis. Locomotor deficits were evident in the acute animals after only 5 days of stretching and increasing the perceived intensity of stretching at week 4 resulted in greater impairment. Stretching initiated chronically resulted in dramatic decrements in locomotor function because most animals had BBB scores of 0-3 for weeks 2, 3, and 4 of stretching. Locomotor function recovered to control levels for both groups within 2 weeks once daily stretching ceased. Histological analysis revealed no apparent signs of overt and persistent damage to muscles undergoing stretching. The current study extends our observations of the stretching phenomenon to a more clinically relevant moderately severe SCI animal model. The results are in agreement with our previous findings and further demonstrate that spinal cord locomotor circuitry is especially vulnerable to the negative effects of stretching at chronic time points. While the clinical relevance of this phenomenon remains unknown, we speculate that stretching may contribute to the lack of locomotor recovery in some patients.
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