14 research outputs found

    Impaired scaling of responses to vestibular stimulation in incomplete SCI

    Get PDF
    Patients with incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI) have impaired postural control leading to a high danger of falling. Clinically, it is impossible to assess the extent to which postural instability due to sensorimotor deficit is influenced by a disturbance in the vestibulospinal pathways. Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) was applied to investigate changes in the vestibular spinal responses and their potential influence on postural stability in iSCI patients. Six chronic iSCI patients and age-matched controls were stimulated with a bipolar binaural stimulus. The centre of pressure (CoP) and soleus EMG responses during free standing with closed eyes on firm and compliant ground were measured. The impairment in postural stability was assessed by the mean amplitude of CoP deflections during two minutes undisturbed standing. Although iSCI patients were significantly less stable than controls, direct GVS responses of the soleus EMG and postural sways tended to be increased on firm ground. The GVS responses increased when changing from firm to compliant ground, showing a close correlation between the extent of postural instability and the response amplitudes. Therefore, challenging proprioceptive feedback induced a significant up-modulation of the GVS responses. However, when we took the postural instability in iSCI patients into account, the EMG and CoP responses to GVS were reduced compared to controls. The combined assessment of EMG and CoP responses to GVS complements the clinical examination and permits evaluation of the preservation and modulation of vestibulospinal responses in iSC

    Neuropathic pain in spinal cord injury: significance of clinical and electrophysiological measures

    Full text link
    A large percentage of spinal cord-injured subjects suffer from neuropathic pain below the level of the lesion (bNP). The neural mechanisms underlying this condition are not clear. The aim of this study was to elucidate the general effects of spinal deafferentiation and of bNP on electroencephalographic (EEG) activity. In addition, the relationship between the presence of bNP and impaired function of the spinothalamic tract was studied. Measurements were performed in complete and incomplete spinal cord-injured subjects with and without bNP as well as in a healthy control group. Spinothalamic tract function, assessed by contact heat evoked potentials, did not differ between subjects with and without bNP; nevertheless, it was impaired in 94% of subjects suffering from bNP. In the EEG recordings, the degree of deafferentiation was reflected in a slowing of EEG peak frequency in the 6-12-Hz band. Taking into account this unspecific effect, spinal cord-injured subjects with bNP showed significantly slower EEG activity than subjects without bNP. A discrimination analysis in the subjects with spinothalamic tract dysfunction correctly classified 84% of subjects as belonging to either the group with bNP or the group without bNP, according to their EEG peak frequency. These findings could be helpful for both the development of an objective diagnosis of bNP and for testing the effectiveness of new therapeutic agents

    Impaired scaling of responses to vestibular stimulation in incomplete SCI

    Full text link
    Patients with incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI) have impaired postural control leading to a high danger of falling. Clinically, it is impossible to assess the extent to which postural instability due to sensorimotor deficit is influenced by a disturbance in the vestibulospinal pathways. Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) was applied to investigate changes in the vestibular spinal responses and their potential influence on postural stability in iSCI patients. Six chronic iSCI patients and age-matched controls were stimulated with a bipolar binaural stimulus. The centre of pressure (CoP) and soleus EMG responses during free standing with closed eyes on firm and compliant ground were measured. The impairment in postural stability was assessed by the mean amplitude of CoP deflections during two minutes undisturbed standing. Although iSCI patients were significantly less stable than controls, direct GVS responses of the soleus EMG and postural sways tended to be increased on firm ground. The GVS responses increased when changing from firm to compliant ground, showing a close correlation between the extent of postural instability and the response amplitudes. Therefore, challenging proprioceptive feedback induced a significant up-modulation of the GVS responses. However, when we took the postural instability in iSCI patients into account, the EMG and CoP responses to GVS were reduced compared to controls. The combined assessment of EMG and CoP responses to GVS complements the clinical examination and permits evaluation of the preservation and modulation of vestibulospinal responses in iSC

    Enhanced recovery of human spinothalamic function is associated with central neuropathic pain after SCI

    Full text link
    Spinothalamic tract (STT) dysfunction seems to be crucially involved in the development of central neuropathic pain (NP) after spinal cord injury (SCI). However, previous attempts to identify differences in the extent or location of STT damage between subjects with and without NP failed. Here we show that the spontaneous recovery of human STT function (within the first year after SCI) in subjects suffering NP is enhanced compared to those not affected. Furthermore, the correlation between current pain intensity (assessed on average 5 years after SCI) and extent of functional recovery substantiates the close relationship between recovery of STT function and the occurrence of NP. These findings contribute to a better understanding of mechanisms involved in the generation of NP after SCI

    Refined sensory measures of neural repair in human spinal cord injury: bridging preclinical findings to clinical value

    Full text link
    Sensory input from the periphery to the brain can be severely compromised or completely abolished after an injury to the spinal cord. Evidence from animal models suggests that endogenous repair processes in the spinal cord mediate extensive sprouting and that this might be further attenuated by targeted therapeutic interventions. However, the extent to which sprouting can contribute to spontaneous recovery after human spinal cord injury (SCI) remains largely unknown, in part because few measurement tools are available in order to non-invasively detect subtle changes in neurophysiology. The proposed application of segmental sensory evoked potentials (e.g., dermatomal contact heat evoked potentials and somatosensory evoked potentials) to assess conduction in ascending pathways (i.e., spinothalamic and dorsal column, respectively) differs from conventional approaches in that individual spinal segments adjacent to the level of lesion are examined. The adoption of these approaches into clinical research might provide improved resolution for measuring changes in sensory impairments and might determine the extent by which spontaneous recovery after SCI is mediated by similar endogenous repair mechanisms in humans as in animal models
    corecore