Keller Anastasia, Rees Kathlene, Prince Daniella, Morehouse Johnny, Shum-Siu Alice, Magnuson David
1 Department of Physiology, University of Louisville , Louisville, Kentucky.
2 Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, University of Louisville , Louisville, Kentucky.
J Neurotrauma. 2017 Jun 15;34(12):2086-2091. doi: 10.1089/neu.2016.4951. Epub 2017 Apr 12.
Joint contractures and spasticity are two common secondary complications of a severe spinal cord injury (SCI), which can significantly reduce quality of life, and stretching is one of the top strategies for rehabilitation of these complications. We have previously shown that a daily static stretching protocol administered to rats at either acute or chronic time points after a moderate or moderate-severe T10 SCI significantly disrupts their hindlimb locomotor function. The objective of the current study was to examine the effects of dynamic range of motion (ROM) stretching on the locomotor function of rats with SCI as an alternative to static stretching. Starting at 6 weeks post-injury (T10 moderate contusion) eight adult Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to hindlimb stretching for 4 weeks. Our standard stretching protocol (six maneuvers to stretch the major hindlimb muscle groups) was modified from 1 min static stretch-and-hold at the end ROM of each stretch position to a dynamic 2 sec hold, 1 sec release rhythm repeated for a duration of 1 min. Four weeks of daily (5 days/week) dynamic stretching led to significant disruption of locomotor function as assessed by the Basso, Beattie, Bresnahan (BBB) Open Field Locomotor Scale and three-dimensional (3D) kinematic and gait analyses. In addition, we identified and analyzed an apparently novel hindlimb response to dynamic stretch that resembles human clonus. The results of the current study extend the observation of the stretching phenomenon to a new modality of stretching that is also commonly used in SCI rehabilitation. Although mechanisms and clinical relevance still need to be established, our findings continue to raise concerns that stretching as a therapy can potentially hinder aspects of locomotor recovery.
关节挛缩和痉挛是严重脊髓损伤(SCI)的两种常见继发性并发症,它们会显著降低生活质量,而拉伸是针对这些并发症进行康复治疗的首要策略之一。我们之前已经表明,在中度或中度严重的T10脊髓损伤后的急性或慢性时间点,对大鼠实施每日静态拉伸方案会显著破坏其后肢运动功能。本研究的目的是研究动态活动范围(ROM)拉伸对脊髓损伤大鼠运动功能的影响,以替代静态拉伸。在损伤后6周(T10中度挫伤)开始,对8只成年Sprague-Dawley大鼠进行后肢拉伸,为期4周。我们的标准拉伸方案(六种动作以拉伸主要后肢肌肉群)从在每个拉伸位置的ROM末端进行1分钟静态拉伸并保持,修改为动态的2秒保持、1秒释放节奏,重复1分钟。通过Basso、Beattie、Bresnahan(BBB)旷场运动量表以及三维(3D)运动学和步态分析评估,四周每日(每周5天)的动态拉伸导致运动功能显著破坏。此外,我们识别并分析了一种明显新颖的后肢对动态拉伸的反应,类似于人类阵挛。本研究结果将对拉伸现象的观察扩展到一种在脊髓损伤康复中也常用的新的拉伸方式。尽管机制和临床相关性仍有待确定,但我们的研究结果继续引发人们对拉伸作为一种治疗方法可能会阻碍运动恢复的担忧。