Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Nov 2006
Comparative StudyFighting for each segment: estimating the clinical value of cervical and thoracic segments in SCI.
Patients suffering from complete spinal cord injury (SCI) are the most likely candidates for the application of new interventions for neural repair and regeneration. It is assumed that some of these treatments will have their strongest impact at the segmental level. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the clinical relevance of potential changes at the segmental levels concerning both improvement and deterioration. ⋯ Segmental changes at the thoracic level are not assessable by the ASIA motor score and SCIM tests. Therefore, the assessment of efficacy and safety in thoracic patients by these two tests has limited value when applied to cervical SCI. These findings may be considered in clinical trials for the evaluation of beneficial effects and risk management when treating patients with spinal cord injury.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Nov 2006
Changes in soleus muscle function and fiber morphology with one week of locomotor training in spinal cord contusion injured rats.
The purpose of this study is two-fold: (1) to examine skeletal muscle function in a rat model of midthoracic contusion spinal cord injury (SCI) and (2) to evaluate the therapeutic influence of a short bout (1 week) of treadmill locomotor training on soleus muscle function (peak force, fatigability, contractile properties, fiber types), size (fiber area), and motor deficit and recovery (BBB scores) after SCI. The rats were injured with a moderate T8 spinal cord contusion and were assigned to either receive treadmill locomotor training (TM), starting 1 week after SCI for 5 consecutive days (20 min/trial, 2 trials/day) or not to receive any exercise intervention (no TM). Locomotor training resulted in a significant improvement in overall locomotor function (32% improvement in BBB scores) when compared to no TM. ⋯ No significant differences were seen in twitch or time to peak tension values across groups. Collectively, these results indicate that 1 week of treadmill locomotor training, initiated early after SCI, can significantly improve motor recovery following SCI. The magnitude of these changes is remarkable considering the relatively short training interval and clearly illustrates the potential that initiating treadmill locomotor training shortly after injury may have on countering some of the functional deficits resulting from SCI.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Nov 2006
Quantification of locomotor recovery following spinal cord contusion in adult rats.
Injury to the spinal cord not only disrupts the functioning of spinal circuits at the site of the impact, but also limits sensorimotor function caudal to the level of the lesion. Ratings of gross locomotor skill are generally used to quantify locomotor recovery following spinal cord injury (SCI). The purpose of this study was to assess behavioral recovery following SCI with three tasks: (1) BBB ratings, (2) walking on a horizontal ladder, and (3) footprint analyses. ⋯ Some locomotor parameters of the injured rats improved slightly (velocity, stride length, stride duration, stance duration), some did not change (interlimb coordination, swing duration, forelimb base of support, hindpaw angle), and others declined (hindlimb base of support) during the recovery period. Together, these results show that gross locomotor skill improved after SCI, while recovery of fine locomotor function was more limited. Multiple tests should be included in future experiments in order to assess gross and fine changes in sensorimotor function following SCI.