4.7 Article

Spinal Locomotion in Cats Following Spinal Cord Injury: A Prospective Study

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani11071994

Keywords

spinal cord injury; treadmill training; central pattern generator; spinal locomotion; reflexes; cats; neurorehabilitation

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The study demonstrates the importance of intensive neurorehabilitation in promoting ambulation recovery in paraplegic animals, leading to improved quality of life and potentially reducing the number of euthanasia procedures performed on these animals.
Simple Summary Functional neurorehabilitation promotes neural reorganization by stimulating subjects without deep pain perception, leading to a faster recovery when compared to spontaneous recovery, and achieving fewer compensatory errors, or even deviations to neuropathic or adaptive pain pathways, such as spasticity. The present study demonstrates the importance of intensive and repetition-based functional neurorehabilitation, which is essential for subjects classified as grade 0 according to the modified Frankel scale. This article aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of intensive neurorehabilitation in paraplegic cats, with no deep pain perception (grade 0 on the modified Frankel scale), with more than three months of injury. Nine cats, admitted to the Arrabida Veterinary Hospital/Arrabida Animal Rehabilitation Center (CRAA), were subjected to a 12-week intensive functional neurorehabilitation protocol, based on ground and underwater treadmill locomotor training, electrostimulation, and kinesiotherapy exercises, aiming to obtain a faster recovery to ambulation and a modulated locomotor pattern of flexion/extension. Of the nine cats that were admitted in this study, 56% (n = 5) recovered from ambulation, 44% of which (4/9) did so through functional spinal locomotion by reflexes, while one achieved this through the recovery of deep pain perception. These results suggest that intensive neurorehabilitation can play an important role in ambulation recovery, allowing for a better quality of life and well-being, which may lead to a reduction in the number of euthanasia procedures performed on paraplegic animals.

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