4.4 Article

Electrocorticographic activity over sensorimotor cortex and motor function in awake behaving rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 113, Issue 7, Pages 2232-2241

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00677.2014

Keywords

H-reflex; motor control; spinal cord; cortex; brain-computer interface

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS-22189, NS-061823, HD-36020]
  2. NYS Spinal Cord Injury Research Board

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Sensorimotor cortex exerts both short-term and long-term control over the spinal reflex pathways that serve motor behaviors. Better understanding of this control could offer new possibilities for restoring function after central nervous system trauma or disease. We examined the impact of ongoing sensorimotor cortex (SMC) activity on the largely monosynaptic pathway of the H-reflex, the electrical analog of the spinal stretch reflex. In 41 awake adult rats, we measured soleus electromyographic (EMG) activity, the soleus H-reflex, and electrocorticographic activity over the contralateral SMC while rats were producing steady-state soleus EMG activity. Principal component analysis of electrocorticographic frequency spectra before H-reflex elicitation consistently revealed three frequency bands: mu beta (5-30 Hz), low gamma (gamma 1; 40-85 Hz), and high gamma (gamma 2; 100-200 Hz). Ongoing (i.e., background) soleus EMG amplitude correlated negatively with mu beta power and positively with gamma 1 power. In contrast, H-reflex size correlated positively with mu beta power and negatively with gamma 1 power, but only when background soleus EMG amplitude was included in the linear model. These results support the hypothesis that increased SMC activation (indicated by decrease in mu beta power and/or increase in gamma 1 power) simultaneously potentiates the H-reflex by exciting spinal motoneurons and suppresses it by decreasing the efficacy of the afferent input. They may help guide the development of new rehabilitation methods and of brain-computer interfaces that use SMC activity as a substitute for lost or impaired motor outputs.

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