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- R V Krishnan.
- Department of Anatomy, Dr. A.L. Mudaliar Post Graduate Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Madras, Taramani Campus, Chennai, India. krish_venk@yahoo.com
- Int. J. Neurosci. 2003 Jun 1;113(6):761-75.
AbstractIn spinal cord injury, recovery of function, if any, confirms the presence of survived neural tissue at the injury site. However, recovery several years after the injury remains unexplained. Body weight bearing locomotor exercises seem to bring these new outcomes. Developing locomotor system and computer simulation studies show that motor learning requires the presence of redundant sets of competing synapses within the spinal cord interneurons. The new exercise regimens have not addressed this essential prerequisite; this could perhaps explain the long delays in recovery. We recommend that inclusion of inductive lability procedure (Krishnan, 1983, 1991, 2003) will help hasten and enhance the recovery.
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