02425nas a2200289 4500008004100000022001400041245008700055210006900142260001200211300001200223490000800235520161100243653002601854653001301880653001501893653001101908653001801919653001901937653002301956653002701979100001302006700001302019700001302032700002102045700002102066856004802087 2014 eng d a1522-159800aPersistent beneficial impact of H-reflex conditioning in spinal cord-injured rats.0 aPersistent beneficial impact of Hreflex conditioning in spinal c c11/2014 a2374-810 v1123 a
Operant conditioning of a spinal cord reflex can improve locomotion in rats and humans with incomplete spinal cord injury. This study examined the persistence of its beneficial effects. In rats in which a right lateral column contusion injury had produced asymmetric locomotion, up-conditioning of the right soleus H-reflex eliminated the asymmetry while down-conditioning had no effect. After the 50-day conditioning period ended, the H-reflex was monitored for 100 [±9 (SD)] (range 79-108) more days and locomotion was then reevaluated. After conditioning ended in up-conditioned rats, the H-reflex continued to increase, and locomotion continued to improve. In down-conditioned rats, the H-reflex decrease gradually disappeared after conditioning ended, and locomotion at the end of data collection remained as impaired as it had been before and immediately after down-conditioning. The persistence (and further progression) of H-reflex increase but not H-reflex decrease in these spinal cord-injured rats is consistent with the fact that up-conditioning improved their locomotion while down-conditioning did not. That is, even after up-conditioning ended, the up-conditioned H-reflex pathway remained adaptive because it improved locomotion. The persistence and further enhancement of the locomotor improvement indicates that spinal reflex conditioning protocols might supplement current therapies and enhance neurorehabilitation. They may be especially useful when significant spinal cord regeneration becomes possible and precise methods for retraining the regenerated spinal cord are needed.
10aH-reflex conditioning10aLearning10aLocomotion10aMemory10aMotor control10aRehabilitation10aspinal cord injury10aspinal cord plasticity1 aChen, Yi1 aChen, Lu1 aWang, Yu1 aWolpaw, Jonathan1 aChen, Xiang Yang uhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25143542