• Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2024

    Bladder responses to thoracolumbar epidural stimulation in female urethane-anesthetized rats with graded contusion spinal cord injuries.

    • Natasha L Wilkins, Daniel Medina-Aguiñaga, Robert F Hoey, Jason Fell, Susan J Harkema, and Charles H Hubscher.
    • Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
    • J. Neurotrauma. 2024 Sep 26.

    AbstractSpinal cord epidural stimulation (scES) is a therapeutic option that promotes functional improvements in sensory, motor, and autonomic functions following spinal cord injury (SCI). Previous scES mapping studies targeting the lower urinary tract (LUT) in rats demonstrated functional response variability based upon lumbosacral level, parameters used, extent of injury (spinally intact vs. chronic anatomically complete spinal transections), and sex. In the current study, female rats with clinically relevant graded incomplete T9 contusion injuries were mapped with scES at 60 days post-injury at three spinal levels (T13, L3, L6) with a novel miniature 15-electrode array designed to deliver optimal specificity. The results obtained during bladder fill and void cycles conducted under urethane anesthesia indicate frequency dependent sub-motor threshold effects on LUT function with a single row of electrodes positioned across the full medio-lateral extent of the dorsal cord. The findings of improved storage and emptying, represented by significantly longer inter-contractile intervals with T13 scES and L3 scES and by a significantly increased estimated void efficiency with L6 scES, respectively, are consistent with previous studies using intact and chronic complete transected male and female rats. The data support the efficacy of selective spinal network stimulation to drive functionally relevant networks for storage versus emptying phases of the urinary cycle. The current findings further demonstrate the translational promise of scES for SCI individuals with LUT dysfunctions, regardless of injury severity.

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