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- Serge Rossignol, Alain Frigon, Grégory Barrière, Marina Martinez, Dorothy Barthélemy, Laurent Bouyer, Marc Bélanger, Janyne Provencher, Connie Chau, Edna Brustein, Hugues Barbeau, Nathalie Giroux, Judith Marcoux, Cécile Langlet, and Olivier Alluin.
- Groupe de Recherche sur le Système Nerveux Central, Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.
- Prog. Brain Res. 2011 Jan 1;188:229-41.
AbstractLocomotion is a very robust motor pattern which can be optimized after different types of lesions to the central and/or peripheral nervous system. This implies that several plastic mechanisms are at play to re-express locomotion after such lesions. Here, we review some of the key observations that helped identify some of these plastic mechanisms. At the core of this plasticity is the existence of a spinal central pattern generator (CPG) which is responsible for hindlimb locomotion as observed after a complete spinal cord section. However, normally, the CPG pattern is adapted by sensory inputs to take the environment into account and by supraspinal inputs in the context of goal-directed locomotion. We therefore also review some of the sensory and supraspinal mechanisms involved in the recovery of locomotion after partial spinal injury. We particularly stress a recent development using a dual spinal lesion paradigm in which a first partial spinal lesion is made which is then followed, some weeks later, by a complete spinalization. The results show that the spinal cord below the spinalization has been changed by the initial partial lesion suggesting that, in the recovery of locomotion after partial spinal lesion, plastic mechanisms within the spinal cord itself are very important.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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