The physiological basis of neurorehabilitation - locomotor training after spinal cord injury

被引:100
|
作者
Hubli, Michele [1 ]
Dietz, Volker [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Zurich, Balgrist Univ Hosp, Spinal Cord Injury Ctr, CH-8008 Zurich, Switzerland
来源
JOURNAL OF NEUROENGINEERING AND REHABILITATION | 2013年 / 10卷
关键词
Locomotion; Neurorehabilitation; Neuronal plasticity; Spinal cord injury; DIRECT-CURRENT STIMULATION; LEG MOVEMENTS; HUMAN GAIT; RECOVERY; MODULATION; PLASTICITY; WALKING; REFLEX; MUSCLE; LUMBAR;
D O I
10.1186/1743-0003-10-5
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Advances in our understanding of the physiological basis of locomotion enable us to optimize the neurorehabilitation of patients with lesions to the central nervous system, such as stroke or spinal cord injury (SCI). It is generally accepted, based on work in animal models, that spinal neuronal machinery can produce a stepping-like output. In both incomplete and complete SCI subjects spinal locomotor circuitries can be activated by functional training which provides appropriate afferent feedback. In motor complete SCI subjects, however, motor functions caudal to the spinal cord lesion are no longer used resulting in neuronal dysfunction. In contrast, in subjects with an incomplete SCI such training paradigms can lead to improved locomotor ability. Appropriate functional training involves the facilitation and assistance of stepping-like movements with the subjects' legs and body weight support as far as is required. In severely affected subjects standardized assisted locomotor training is provided by body weight supported treadmill training with leg movements either manually assisted or moved by a driven gait orthosis. Load-and hip-joint related afferent input is of crucial importance during locomotor training as it leads to appropriate leg muscle activation and thus increases the efficacy of the rehabilitative training. Successful recovery of locomotion after SCI relies on the ability of spinal locomotor circuitries to utilize specific multisensory information to generate a locomotor pattern. It seems that a critical combination of sensory cues is required to generate and improve locomotor patterns after SCI. In addition to functional locomotor training there are numbers of other promising experimental approaches, such as tonic epidural electrical or magnetic stimulation of the spinal cord, which both promote locomotor permissive states that lead to a coordinated locomotor output. Therefore, a combination of functional training and activation of spinal locomotor circuitries, for example by epidural/ flexor reflex electrical stimulation or drug application (e. g. noradrenergic agonists), might constitute an effective strategy to promote neuroplasticity after SCI in the future.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The physiological basis of neurorehabilitation - locomotor training after spinal cord injury
    Michèle Hubli
    Volker Dietz
    Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation, 10
  • [2] Locomotor training for walking after spinal cord injury
    Mehrholz, Jan
    Kugler, Joachim
    Pohl, Marcus
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2012, (11):
  • [3] Neurophysiological Changes After Paired Brain and Spinal Cord Stimulation Coupled With Locomotor Training in Human Spinal Cord Injury
    Pulverenti, Timothy S.
    Zaaya, Morad
    Grabowski, Monika
    Grabowski, Ewelina
    Islam, Md Anamul
    Li, Jeffrey
    Murray, Lynda M.
    Knikou, Maria
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [4] Neurorehabilitation of Sensorimotor Function after Spinal Cord Injury
    Kriz, J.
    Hlinkova, Z.
    CESKA A SLOVENSKA NEUROLOGIE A NEUROCHIRURGIE, 2016, 79 (04) : 378 - 393
  • [5] Locomotor training after human spinal cord injury: A series of case studies
    Behmran, AL
    Harkema, SJ
    PHYSICAL THERAPY, 2000, 80 (07): : 688 - 700
  • [6] Effects of Locomotor Training After Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury: A Systematic Review
    Morawietz, Christina
    Moffat, Fiona
    ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION, 2013, 94 (11): : 2297 - 2308
  • [7] Locomotor training progression and outcomes after incomplete spinal cord injury
    Behrman, AL
    Lawless-Dixon, AR
    Davis, SB
    Bowden, MG
    Nair, P
    Phadke, C
    Hannold, EM
    Plummer, P
    Harkema, SJ
    PHYSICAL THERAPY, 2005, 85 (12): : 1356 - 1371
  • [8] Prediction Of Gait Recovery As A Tool To Rationalize Locomotor Training In Spinal Cord Injury
    Mirbagheri, M. M.
    Niu, X.
    Varoqui, D.
    Kindig, M.
    2012 4TH IEEE RAS & EMBS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIOMEDICAL ROBOTICS AND BIOMECHATRONICS (BIOROB), 2012, : 1394 - 1397
  • [9] Influence of spinal reflexes on the locomotor pattern after spinal cord injury
    Hubli, M.
    Dietz, V.
    Bolliger, M.
    GAIT & POSTURE, 2011, 34 (03) : 409 - 414
  • [10] Locomotor impact of beneficial or nonbeneficial H-reflex conditioning after spinal cord injury
    Chen, Yi
    Chen, Lu
    Liu, Rongliang
    Wang, Yu
    Chen, Xiang Yang
    Wolpaw, Jonathan R.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2014, 111 (06) : 1249 - 1258