Department of Health Sciences and Technology, Brain Research Institute, University of Zurich, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Brain. 2012 Nov;135(Pt 11):3265-81. doi: 10.1093/brain/aws270.
Whereas large injuries to the brain lead to considerable irreversible functional impairments, smaller strokes or traumatic lesions are often associated with good recovery. This recovery occurs spontaneously, and there is ample evidence from preclinical studies to suggest that adjacent undamaged areas (also known as peri-infarct regions) of the cortex 'take over' control of the disrupted functions. In rodents, sprouting of axons and dendrites has been observed in this region following stroke, while reduced inhibition from horizontal or callosal connections, or plastic changes in subcortical connections, could also occur. The exact mechanisms underlying functional recovery after small- to medium-sized strokes remain undetermined but are of utmost importance for understanding the human situation and for designing effective treatments and rehabilitation strategies. In the present study, we selectively destroyed large parts of the forelimb motor and premotor cortex of adult rats with an ischaemic injury. A behavioural test requiring highly skilled, cortically controlled forelimb movements showed that some animals recovered well from this lesion whereas others did not. To investigate the reasons behind these differences, we used anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques and intracortical microstimulation. Retrograde tracing from the cervical spinal cord showed a correlation between the number of cervically projecting corticospinal neurons present in the hindlimb sensory-motor cortex and good behavioural recovery. Anterograde tracing from the hindlimb sensory-motor cortex also showed a positive correlation between the degree of functional recovery and the sprouting of neurons from this region into the cervical spinal cord. Finally, intracortical microstimulation confirmed the positive correlation between rewiring of the hindlimb sensory-motor cortex and the degree of forelimb motor recovery. In conclusion, these experiments suggest that following stroke to the forelimb motor cortex, cells in the hindlimb sensory-motor area reorganize and become functionally connected to the cervical spinal cord. These new connections, probably in collaboration with surviving forelimb neurons and more complex indirect connections via the brainstem, play an important role for the recovery of cortically controlled behaviours like skilled forelimb reaching.
虽然大脑的大损伤会导致相当大的不可逆功能障碍,但较小的中风或创伤性损伤通常与良好的恢复相关。这种恢复是自发发生的,并且来自临床前研究的充分证据表明,皮层的相邻未受损区域(也称为梗死周边区域)“接管”了中断功能的控制。在啮齿动物中,中风后观察到该区域的轴突和树突发芽,而来自水平或连合连接的抑制减少,或皮质下连接的塑性变化,也可能发生。小至中等大小中风后功能恢复的确切机制仍未确定,但对于理解人类情况以及设计有效治疗和康复策略至关重要。在本研究中,我们使用缺血性损伤选择性地破坏成年大鼠前肢运动和前运动皮层的大部分。需要高度熟练、皮质控制的前肢运动的行为测试表明,一些动物从该损伤中恢复良好,而其他动物则没有。为了研究这些差异的原因,我们使用了顺行和逆行示踪技术和皮质内微刺激。来自颈脊髓的逆行示踪显示,在下肢感觉运动皮层中存在的颈伸皮质脊髓神经元的数量与良好的行为恢复之间存在相关性。来自下肢感觉运动皮层的顺行示踪也显示出该区域的神经元向颈脊髓发芽的程度与功能恢复的程度之间存在正相关。最后,皮质内微刺激证实了下肢感觉运动皮层的重新布线与前肢运动恢复程度之间的正相关。总之,这些实验表明,在前肢运动皮层中风后,下肢感觉运动区的细胞会重组,并与颈脊髓建立功能连接。这些新的连接,可能与存活的前肢神经元以及通过脑干的更复杂的间接连接协同作用,对于皮质控制的行为(如熟练的前肢伸展)的恢复起着重要作用。