Respiratory physiology & neurobiology
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Respir Physiol Neurobiol · Nov 2009
ReviewDescending bulbospinal pathways and recovery of respiratory motor function following spinal cord injury.
The rodent respiratory system is a relevant model for study of the intrinsic post-lesion mechanisms of neuronal plasticity and resulting recovery after high cervical spinal cord injury. An unilateral cervical injury (hemisection, lateral section or contusion) interrupts unilaterally bulbospinal respiratory pathways to phrenic motor neurons innervating the diaphragm and leads to important respiratory defects on the injured side. However, the ipsilateral phrenic nerve exhibits a spontaneous and progressive recovery with post-lesion time. ⋯ These pathways are located principally in the lateral part of the spinal cord and involve 30% of the medullary respiratory neurons. By contrast, in chronic post-lesion conditions, the medial part of the spinal cord becomes sufficient to trigger substantial ipsilateral respiratory drive. Thus, after unilateral cervical spinal cord injury, respiratory reactivation is associated with a time-dependent anatomo-functional reorganization of the bulbospinal respiratory descending pathways, which represents an adaptative strategy for functional compensation.
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Respir Physiol Neurobiol · Nov 2009
ReviewAutonomic function following cervical spinal cord injury.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is commonly associated with devastating paralysis. However, this condition also results in a variety of autonomic dysfunctions, primarily: cardiovascular, broncho-pulmonary, urinary, gastrointestinal, sexual, and thermoregulatory. SCI and the resultant unstable autonomic control are responsible for increased mortality from cardiovascular and respiratory disease among individuals with SCI. ⋯ Furthermore, similar relationships can exist between the level of SCI and function of other organs that are under autonomic control (bladder, bowel, sweat glands, etc.). It is also important to appreciate that high cervical injuries result in significant respiratory dysfunctions due to the involvement of the diaphragm and a larger portion of the accessory respiratory muscles. Early recognition and timely management of autonomic dysfunctions in individuals with SCI are crucial for the long term health outcomes in this population.
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Respir Physiol Neurobiol · Nov 2009
ReviewIntermittent hypoxia induces functional recovery following cervical spinal injury.
Respiratory-related complications are the leading cause of death in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients. Few effective SCI treatments are available after therapeutic interventions are performed in the period shortly after injury (e.g. spine stabilization and prevention of further spinal damage). ⋯ Early experiments suggest that intermittent hypoxia also enhances respiratory motor output in experimental models of cervical SCI (cervical hemisection) and that the capacity to induce functional recovery is greater with longer durations post-injury. Available evidence suggests that intermittent hypoxia-induced spinal plasticity has considerable therapeutic potential to treat respiratory insufficiency following chronic cervical spinal injury.
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Respir Physiol Neurobiol · Nov 2009
ReviewPhrenic nerve stimulation in patients with spinal cord injury.
Phrenic nerve pacing (PNP) is a clinically useful technique to restore inspiratory muscle function in patients with respiratory failure secondary to cervical spinal cord injury. In this review, patient evaluation, equipment, methods of implementation, clinical outcomes, and the complications and side effects of PNP are discussed. Despite considerable technical development, and clinical success, however, current PNP systems have significant limitations. ⋯ Inadequate inspired volume generation may arise secondary to incomplete diaphragm activation, reversed recruitment order of motor units, fiber type conversion resulting in reduced force generating capacity and lack of coincident intercostal muscle activation. A novel method of pacing is under development which involves stimulating spinal cord tracts which synapse with the inspiratory motoneuron pools. This technique results in combined activation of the intercostal muscles and diaphragm in concert and holds promise to provide a more physiologic and effective method of PNP.
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Respir Physiol Neurobiol · Nov 2009
ReviewThe crossed phrenic phenomenon and recovery of function following spinal cord injury.
This review will focus on neural plasticity and recovery of respiratory function after spinal cord injury and feature the "crossed phrenic phenomenon" (CPP) as a model for demonstrating such plasticity and recovery. A very brief summary of the earlier literature on the CPP will be followed by a more detailed review of the more recent studies. Two aspects of plasticity associated with the CPP that have been introduced in the literature recently have been spontaneous recovery of ipsilateral hemidiaphragmatic function following chronic spinal cord injury and drug-induced persistent recovery of the ipsilateral hemidiaphragm lasting long after animals have been weaned from drug treatment. ⋯ Both models provide an opportunity to sort out the intracellular signaling cascades that may be involved in motor recovery in the respiratory system after spinal cord injury. Finally, the review will examine developmental plasticity of the CPP and discuss how the expression of the CPP changes in neonatal rats as they mature to adults. Understanding the underlying mechanisms behind the spontaneous expression of the crossed phrenic pathway either in the developing animal or after chronic spinal cord injury in the adult animal may provide clues to initiating respiratory recovery sooner to alleviate human suffering and eventually eliminate the leading cause of death in human cases of spinal cord injury.