4.5 Article

Diaphragm Motor-Evoked Potential Induced by Cervical Magnetic Stimulation following Cervical Spinal Cord Contusion in the Rat

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 38, Issue 15, Pages 2122-2140

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2021.0080

Keywords

contusion; diaphragm; magnetic stimulation; respiration; spinal cord injury

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 108-2636-B110-001, 109-2636-B-110-001, 110-2636-B-110-001]
  2. NSYSU-KMU Joint Research Project [109-I007]
  3. Fondation Medisite
  4. Fondation de France

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cervical magnetic stimulation can be used to assess post-injury excitability of phrenic motor outputs, with shorter latency and increased amplitude observed in response to acute injury. Placing the stimulation more laterally at the left spinal cord in subchronic and chronic injury stages generally leads to larger motor-evoked potentials of the diaphragm.
Cervical spinal injury is typically associated with respiratory impairments due to damage to bulbospinal respiratory pathways and phrenic motoneurons. Magnetic stimulation is a non-invasive approach for the evaluation and modulation of the nervous system. The present study was designed to examine whether cervical magnetic stimulation can be applied to evaluate diaphragmatic motor outputs in a pre-clinical rat model of cervical spinal injury. The bilateral diaphragm was monitored in anesthetized rats using electromyogram at the acute, subchronic, and chronic stages following left mid-cervical contusion. The center of a figure-of-eight coil was placed 20 mm caudal to bregma to stimulate the cervical spinal cord. The results demonstrated that a single magnetic stimulation can evoke significant motor-evoked potentials in the diaphragms of uninjured animals when the animal's head was placed 30 mm right or left from the center of the coil. The spontaneous bursting of the diaphragm was significantly attenuated by contusion injury at all-time-points post-injury. However, the threshold of the diaphragmatic motor-evoked potential was reduced, and the amplitude of the diaphragmatic motor-evoked potential was enhanced in response to cervical magnetic stimulation at the acute injury stage. Moreover, the motor-evoked potentials of the bilateral diaphragm in animals with contusions were generally larger when the coil was placed at the left spinal cord at the subchronic and chronic injury stages. These results suggested that cervical magnetic stimulation can be used to examine the excitability of phrenic motor outputs post-injury, and magnetic stimulation applied more laterally may be more effective for triggering diaphragmatic motor-evoked potentials.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available