Nikhil Verma, Jeonghoon Oh, Ernesto Bedoy, Nikole Chetty, Alexander G Steele, Seo Jeong Park, Jaime R Guerrero, Amir H Faraji, Douglas Weber, Dimitry G Sayenko
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) interrupts signal transmission between the brain and muscles, often leading to permanent motor impairments. Improving hand function is the highest priority for people with tetraplegia. Electrically engaging spinal circuits using spinal cord stimulation has been demonstrated to improve hand function in people with paralysis post-SCI. Here, we utilized a non-invasive intervention - transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS) to facilitate voluntary hand function after SCI. We used a multi-cathode tSCS array to study recruitment patterns across various upper-limb muscles, including forearm subcompartments, in five neurologically intact (NI) participants and five participants with SCI. Our primary objectives was to employ tSCS over the cervical spinal cord to delineate the stimulation-evoked response patterns and assess the effects of tSCS on hand motor function in both groups. We demonstrated that tonic tSCS targeting hand muscles enhanced muscle activity (by up to 21%), increased grip strength (by up to 55%), and improved activation patterns in the participants with SCI. Furthermore, using high-density electromyography-based extraction of motor unit activity, we provided experimental evidence that tSCS can transsynaptically modulate the activity of individual motor units, enabling integration of supraspinal inputs within these networks. Our results indicate that targeted tSCS can immediately improve hand motor function after SCI and suggest potential mechanisms for its facilitatory effects. Similar facilitation of motor unit activity, enhanced muscle activation(up to 65%), and, in some cases, grip strength increases of up to 66%, were also observed in NI participants, indicating that cervical tSCS engages spinal sensorimotor circuits consistently across populations.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neurophysiology publishes original articles on the function of the nervous system. All levels of function are included, from the membrane and cell to systems and behavior. Experimental approaches include molecular neurobiology, cell culture and slice preparations, membrane physiology, developmental neurobiology, functional neuroanatomy, neurochemistry, neuropharmacology, systems electrophysiology, imaging and mapping techniques, and behavioral analysis. Experimental preparations may be invertebrate or vertebrate species, including humans. Theoretical studies are acceptable if they are tied closely to the interpretation of experimental data and elucidate principles of broad interest.