Harris R Luke W, Bobet Jacques, Sanelli Leo, Bennett David J
Centre for Neuroscience, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2006 Feb;95(2):1124-33. doi: 10.1152/jn.00456.2005. Epub 2005 Nov 9.
Paralyzed skeletal muscle sometimes becomes faster and more fatigable after spinal cord injury (SCI) because of reduced activity. However, in some cases, pronounced muscle activity in the form of spasticity (hyperreflexia and hypertonus) occurs after long-term SCI. We hypothesized that this spastic activity may be associated with a reversal back to a slower, less fatigable muscle. In adult rats, a sacral (S2) spinal cord transection was performed, affecting only tail musculature and resulting in chronic tail spasticity beginning 2 wk later and lasting indefinitely. At 8 mo after injury, we examined the contractile properties of the segmental tail muscle in anesthetized spastic rats and in age-matched normal rats. The segmental tail muscle has only a few motor units (<12), which were easily detected with graded nerve stimulation, revealing two clear motor unit twitch durations. The dominant faster unit twitches peaked at 15 ms and ended within 50 ms, whereas the slower unit twitches only peaked at 30-50 ms. With chronic injury, this slow twitch component increased, resulting in a large overall increase (>150%) in the fraction of the peak muscle twitch force remaining at 50 ms. With injury, the peak muscle twitch (evoked with supramaximal stimulation) also increased in its time to peak (+48.9%) and half-rise time (+150.0%), and decreased in its maximum rise (-35.0%) and decay rates (-40.1%). Likewise, after a tetanic stimulation, the tetanus half-fall time increased by 53.8%. Therefore the slow portion of the muscle was enhanced in spastic muscles. Consistent with slowing, posttetanic potentiation was 9.2% lower and the stimulation frequency required to produce half-maximal tetanus decreased 39.0% in chronic spinals. Interestingly, in spastic muscles compared with normal, whole muscle twitch force was 81.1% higher, whereas tetanic force production was 38.1% lower. Hence the twitch-to-tetanus ratio increased 104.0%. Inconsistent with overall slowing, whole spastic muscles were 61.5% more fatigable than normal muscles. Thus contrary to the classical slow-to-fast conversion that is seen after SCI without spasticity, SCI with spasticity is associated with a mixed effect, including a preservation/enhancement of slow properties, but a loss of fatigue resistance.
由于活动减少,脊髓损伤(SCI)后瘫痪的骨骼肌有时会变得更快且更容易疲劳。然而,在某些情况下,长期SCI后会出现以痉挛(反射亢进和张力亢进)形式表现的明显肌肉活动。我们推测这种痉挛活动可能与肌肉逆转回较慢、较不易疲劳的状态有关。在成年大鼠中,进行骶部(S2)脊髓横断术,仅影响尾部肌肉组织,并导致2周后开始出现慢性尾部痉挛且持续存在。在损伤后8个月,我们检查了麻醉的痉挛大鼠和年龄匹配的正常大鼠的节段性尾部肌肉的收缩特性。节段性尾部肌肉只有少数运动单位(<12个),通过分级神经刺激很容易检测到,显示出两种明显的运动单位抽搐持续时间。占主导的较快单位抽搐在15毫秒时达到峰值,并在50毫秒内结束,而较慢单位抽搐仅在30 - 50毫秒时达到峰值。随着慢性损伤,这种慢抽搐成分增加,导致在50毫秒时剩余的峰值肌肉抽搐力比例大幅总体增加(>150%)。随着损伤,峰值肌肉抽搐(用超强刺激诱发)在达到峰值的时间(+48.9%)和上升时间的一半(+150.0%)也增加,而其最大上升(-35.0%)和衰减率(-40.1%)降低。同样,在强直刺激后,强直收缩的下降时间一半增加了53.8%。因此,痉挛肌肉中肌肉的慢成分增强。与收缩减慢一致,慢性脊髓损伤大鼠的强直后增强降低了9.2%,产生半数最大强直收缩所需的刺激频率降低了39.0%。有趣的是,与正常肌肉相比,痉挛肌肉的整块肌肉抽搐力高81.1%,而强直收缩力产生低38.1%。因此,抽搐与强直收缩的比例增加了104.0%。与总体收缩减慢不一致的是,整块痉挛肌肉比正常肌肉更容易疲劳61.5%。因此,与无痉挛的SCI后所见的经典慢到快转变相反,有痉挛的SCI与混合效应相关,包括慢特性的保留/增强,但抗疲劳能力丧失。