4.7 Article

Constraint-induced movement therapy in the adult rat after unilateral corticospinal tract injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 38, Pages 9386-9403

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1697-08.2008

Keywords

corticospinal tract; forced limb use; spinal cord injury; plasticity; rehabilitation; activity

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [31-63633.00]
  2. National Center of Competence in Research
  3. The Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation (Springfield, NJ)

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Smaller spinal cord injuries often allow some degree of spontaneous behavioral improvements because of structural rearrangements within different descending fiber tracts or intraspinal circuits. In this study, we investigate whether rehabilitative training of the forelimb (forced limb use) influences behavioral recovery and plastic events after injury to a defined spinal tract, the corticospinal tract (CST). Female adult Lewis rats received a unilateral CST injury at the brainstem level. Use of the contralateral impaired forelimb was either restricted, by a cast, or forced, by casting the unimpaired forelimb immediately after injury for either 1 or 3 weeks. Forced use of the impaired forelimb was followed by full behavioral recovery on the irregular horizontal ladder, whereas animals that could not use their affected side remained impaired. BDA (biotinylated dextran amine) labeling of the intact CST showed lesion-induced growth across the midline where CST collaterals increased their innervation density and extended fibers toward the ventral and the dorsal horn in response to forced limb use. Gene chip analysis of the denervated ventral horn revealed changes in particular for growth factors, adhesion and guidance molecules, as well as components of synapse formation suggesting an important role for these factors in activity-dependent intraspinal reorganization after unilateral CST injury.

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