Young Wise
W. M. Keck Center for Collaborative Neuroscience, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ, USA.
Cell Transplant. 2015;24(3):429-46. doi: 10.3727/096368915X686904. Epub 2015 Feb 2.
In recent years, several investigators have successfully regenerated axons in animal spinal cords without locomotor recovery. One explanation is that the animals were not trained to use the regenerated connections. Intensive locomotor training improves walking recovery after spinal cord injury (SCI) in people, and >90% of people with incomplete SCI recover walking with training. Although the optimal timing, duration, intensity, and type of locomotor training are still controversial, many investigators have reported beneficial effects of training on locomotor function. The mechanisms by which training improves recovery are not clear, but an attractive theory is available. In 1949, Donald Hebb proposed a famous rule that has been paraphrased as "neurons that fire together, wire together." This rule provided a theoretical basis for a widely accepted theory that homosynaptic and heterosynaptic activity facilitate synaptic formation and consolidation. In addition, the lumbar spinal cord has a locomotor center, called the central pattern generator (CPG), which can be activated nonspecifically with electrical stimulation or neurotransmitters to produce walking. The CPG is an obvious target to reconnect after SCI. Stimulating motor cortex, spinal cord, or peripheral nerves can modulate lumbar spinal cord excitability. Motor cortex stimulation causes long-term changes in spinal reflexes and synapses, increases sprouting of the corticospinal tract, and restores skilled forelimb function in rats. Long used to treat chronic pain, motor cortex stimuli modify lumbar spinal network excitability and improve lower extremity motor scores in humans. Similarly, epidural spinal cord stimulation has long been used to treat pain and spasticity. Subthreshold epidural stimulation reduces the threshold for locomotor activity. In 2011, Harkema et al. reported lumbosacral epidural stimulation restores motor control in chronic motor complete patients. Peripheral nerve or functional electrical stimulation (FES) has long been used to activate sacral nerves to treat bladder and pelvic dysfunction and to augment motor function. In theory, FES should facilitate synaptic formation and motor recovery after regenerative therapies. Upcoming clinical trials provide unique opportunities to test the theory.
近年来,一些研究人员已成功使动物脊髓中的轴突再生,但并未恢复运动功能。一种解释是这些动物没有接受利用再生连接的训练。强化运动训练可改善人类脊髓损伤(SCI)后的步行恢复情况,超过90%的不完全性SCI患者经训练后恢复了步行能力。尽管运动训练的最佳时机、持续时间、强度和类型仍存在争议,但许多研究人员报告了训练对运动功能的有益影响。训练改善恢复的机制尚不清楚,但有一个引人关注的理论。1949年,唐纳德·赫布提出了一条著名的规则,可解释为“一起放电的神经元,连接在一起”。该规则为一个被广泛接受的理论提供了理论基础,即同突触和异突触活动促进突触形成和巩固。此外,腰段脊髓有一个运动中枢,称为中枢模式发生器(CPG),可通过电刺激或神经递质非特异性激活以产生步行。CPG显然是SCI后重新连接的一个目标。刺激运动皮层、脊髓或周围神经可调节腰段脊髓的兴奋性。运动皮层刺激可引起脊髓反射和突触的长期变化,增加皮质脊髓束的发芽,并恢复大鼠的熟练前肢功能。长期以来用于治疗慢性疼痛的运动皮层刺激可改变腰段脊髓网络的兴奋性,并改善人类下肢运动评分。同样,硬膜外脊髓刺激长期以来一直用于治疗疼痛和痉挛。阈下硬膜外刺激可降低运动活动的阈值。2011年,哈克马等人报告腰骶硬膜外刺激可恢复慢性运动完全性患者的运动控制。周围神经或功能性电刺激(FES)长期以来一直用于激活骶神经,以治疗膀胱和盆腔功能障碍并增强运动功能。理论上,FES应促进再生治疗后的突触形成和运动恢复。即将开展的临床试验为检验该理论提供了独特的机会。