Capaday Charles
Brain and Movement Laboratory, CRULRG, Departmentt of Anatomy and Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Université Laval, Québec City, Québec, Canada G1J 2G3.
Trends Neurosci. 2002 Jul;25(7):370-6. doi: 10.1016/s0166-2236(02)02173-2.
Walking the way we do is inherently unstable. Sophisticated neurological control systems are required to ensure that we progress and maintain our balance at the same time. Most of what is known about the functional organization of these neurological control systems is inferred from studies on animals. Here, I compare selected studies on the neural control of human walking with similar studies in reduced animal preparations. The simple monosynaptic reflex appears to be controlled by comparable mechanisms in walking cats and humans. However, peripheral feedback mechanisms suggested to contribute to the switch from stance to swing on the basis of experiments in reduced cat preparations have little influence during human walking. A cat whose spinal cord has been completely transected can be made to walk on a treadmill by drug injections, but such an immediate effect of pharmacological intervention is not seen in humans. However, there have been reports that pharmacological intervention can improve the walking of patients with incomplete spinal cord injury, especially when pharmacological treatment is combined with training.
我们行走的方式本质上是不稳定的。需要复杂的神经控制系统来确保我们在前进的同时保持平衡。目前已知的关于这些神经控制系统功能组织的大部分信息都是从对动物的研究中推断出来的。在这里,我将人类行走神经控制的选定研究与在简化动物模型中的类似研究进行比较。简单的单突触反射在行走的猫和人类中似乎由类似的机制控制。然而,基于在简化猫模型中的实验而提出的、被认为有助于从站立到摆动转换的外周反馈机制,在人类行走过程中影响很小。一只脊髓已被完全横断的猫可以通过注射药物在跑步机上行走,但这种药物干预的即时效果在人类中并未出现。然而,有报道称药物干预可以改善不完全脊髓损伤患者的行走能力,特别是当药物治疗与训练相结合时。