NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL BASIS OF FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY IN THE NEONATAL SPINALIZED RAT

Citation
Jw. Commissiong et Y. Sauve, NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL BASIS OF FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY IN THE NEONATAL SPINALIZED RAT, Experimental Brain Research, 96(3), 1993, pp. 473-479
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00144819
Volume
96
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
473 - 479
Database
ISI
SICI code
0014-4819(1993)96:3<473:NBOFRI>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
It had been shown previously that, following spinalization of the neon atal rat on postnatal day 7 (PN7), at the middle thoracic level, there was spontaneous recovery of coordinated stepping in the hindlimbs, en abling the animal to execute quadrupedal locomotion, with an ataxic ga it. No significant recovery occurred in rats that were similarly spina lized on PN14. Despite the functional recovery in the PN7 group, their hindlimbs were paralyzed when not in contact with a surface. In the p resent experiments, at 16-18 weeks after spinalization, muscle spindle GpIa and cutaneous afferents were tested for functional connectivity to the alpha motoneurons (a-MNs) that innervate the right triceps sura e (TS) muscles. The Hoffmann reflex (H-reflex), the tonic stretch refl ex (TSR), and cutaneous reflexes were recorded from the right TS muscl es in the nonanesthetized, intercollicular decerebrate preparation. Th e H-reflex and the TSR were readily elicited from the PN7 animals, but not from the PN14 animals. The PN14 preparations were characterized b y prolonged(>18 h in 3/8 cases), spontaneous discharge of motor units, and prominent M responses. There was widespread, bilateral convergenc e of cutaneous afferents from the hindquarters to the a-MNs of the TS muscles in both the PN7 and the PN14 preparations. In the nonspinalize d, control preparation, only ipsilateral, cutaneous afferents activate d the right TS a-MNs. These results demonstrate that in the chronic (> 3 months after spinalization), spinalized PN7 rat, but not in the PN14 rat, there is a tight functional connectivity between the hindlimb Gp Ia afferents and their homonymous a-MNs.