Oxygen transport kinetics underpin rapid and robust diaphragm recovery following chronic spinal cord injury.

The Journal of Physiology Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-22 DOI:10.1113/JP280684
Philippa M Warren, Roger W P Kissane, Stuart Egginton, Jessica C F Kwok, Graham N Askew
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Key points: Spinal treatment can restore diaphragm function in all animals 1 month following C2 hemisection induced paralysis. Greater recovery occurs the longer after injury the treatment is applied. Through advanced assessment of muscle mechanics, innovative histology and oxygen tension modelling, we have comprehensively characterized in vivo diaphragm function and phenotype. Muscle work loops reveal a significant deficit in diaphragm functional properties following chronic injury and paralysis, which are normalized following restored muscle activity caused by plasticity-induced spinal reconnection. Injury causes global and local alterations in diaphragm muscle vascular supply, limiting oxygen diffusion and disturbing function. Restoration of muscle activity reverses these alterations, restoring oxygen supply to the tissue and enabling recovery of muscle functional properties. There remain metabolic deficits following restoration of diaphragm activity, probably explaining only partial functional recovery. We hypothesize that these deficits need to be resolved to restore complete respiratory motor function.

Abstract: Months after spinal cord injury (SCI), respiratory deficits remain the primary cause of morbidity and mortality for patients. It is possible to induce partial respiratory motor functional recovery in chronic SCI following 2 weeks of spinal neuroplasticity. However, the peripheral mechanisms underpinning this recovery are largely unknown, limiting development of new clinical treatments with potential for complete functional restoration. Utilizing a rat hemisection model, diaphragm function and paralysis was assessed and recovered at chronic time points following trauma through chondroitinase ABC induced neuroplasticity. We simulated the diaphragm's in vivo cyclical length change and activity patterns using the work loop technique at the same time as assessing global and local measures of the muscles histology to quantify changes in muscle phenotype, microvascular composition, and oxidative capacity following injury and recovery. These data were fed into a physiologically informed model of tissue oxygen transport. We demonstrate that hemidiaphragm paralysis causes muscle fibre hypertrophy, maintaining global oxygen supply, although it alters isolated muscle kinetics, limiting respiratory function. Treatment induced recovery of respiratory activity normalized these effects, increasing oxygen supply, restoring optimal diaphragm functional properties. However, metabolic demands of the diaphragm were significantly reduced following both injury and recovery, potentially limiting restoration of normal muscle performance. The mechanism of rapid respiratory muscle recovery following spinal trauma occurs through oxygen transport, metabolic demand and functional dynamics of striated muscle. Overall, these data support a systems-wide approach to the treatment of SCI, and identify new targets to mediate complete respiratory recovery.

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氧转运动力学是慢性脊髓损伤后膈肌快速和强健恢复的基础。
脊柱治疗可使所有动物在C2半切断性麻痹后1个月恢复膈肌功能。受伤后愈久,恢复愈好。通过先进的肌肉力学评估,创新的组织学和氧张力模型,我们全面表征了体内隔膜功能和表型。肌肉工作回路揭示了慢性损伤和瘫痪后膈肌功能特性的显著缺陷,这种缺陷在可塑性诱导的脊髓再连接引起的肌肉活动恢复后正常化。损伤引起膈肌血管供应的整体和局部改变,限制氧气扩散和干扰功能。肌肉活动的恢复逆转了这些变化,恢复了组织的氧气供应,使肌肉功能特性得以恢复。膈肌活动恢复后仍存在代谢缺陷,可能只能解释部分功能恢复。我们假设,这些缺陷需要解决,以恢复完整的呼吸运动功能。摘要:脊髓损伤(SCI)后数月,呼吸功能障碍仍是患者发病和死亡的主要原因。慢性脊髓损伤患者在脊髓神经可塑性治疗2周后,部分呼吸运动功能恢复是可能的。然而,支持这种恢复的外周机制在很大程度上是未知的,限制了具有完全功能恢复潜力的新临床治疗的发展。利用大鼠半切模型,通过软骨素酶ABC诱导的神经可塑性,评估创伤后膈肌功能和瘫痪并在慢性时间点恢复。我们使用工作环技术模拟了横膈膜在体内的周期性长度变化和活动模式,同时评估了肌肉组织学的整体和局部测量,以量化肌肉表型、微血管组成和氧化能力在损伤和恢复后的变化。这些数据被输入到组织氧运输的生理信息模型中。我们证明,半膈肌麻痹导致肌纤维肥大,维持全球氧气供应,尽管它改变了孤立的肌肉动力学,限制了呼吸功能。治疗诱导呼吸活动的恢复使这些效果正常化,增加氧气供应,恢复最佳隔膜功能特性。然而,膈肌的代谢需求在损伤和恢复后都显著降低,这可能限制了正常肌肉性能的恢复。脊髓损伤后呼吸肌快速恢复的机制与横纹肌的氧转运、代谢需求和功能动力学有关。总的来说,这些数据支持全系统治疗脊髓损伤的方法,并确定了介导呼吸完全恢复的新靶点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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