Abstract

Most therapies under development to restore motor function after spinal cord injury (SCI) assume intact brain motor functions. To examine this assumption, 12 patients with chronic, complete SCI and 12 controls underwent functional MRI during attempted, and during imagined, right foot movement, each at two force levels. In patients with SCI, many features of normal motor system function were preserved, however, several departures from normal were apparent: (i) volume of activation was generally much reduced, e.g. 4-8% of normal in primary sensorimotor cortex, in the setting of twice normal variance in signal change; (ii) abnormal activation patterns were present, e.g. increased pallido-thalamocortical loop activity during attempted movement and abnormal processing in primary sensorimotor cortex during imagined movement; and (iii) modulation of function with change in task or in force level did not conform to patterns seen in controls, e.g. in controls, attempted movement activated more than imagined movement did within left primary sensorimotor cortex and right dorsal cerebellum, while imagined movement activated more than attempted movement did in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and right precentral gyrus. These modulations were absent in patients with SCI. Many features of brain motor system function during foot movement persist after chronic complete SCI. However, substantial derangements of brain activation, poor modulation of function with change in task demands and emergence of pathological brain events were present in patients. Because brain function is central to voluntary movement, interventions that aim to improve motor function after chronic SCI likely also need to attend to these abnormalities of brain function.

Highlights

  • Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains a major source of disability

  • The current study aimed to evaluate motor system function in patients with chronic, complete SCI

  • The main result was that patients with chronic SCI, while retaining many features of normal brain motor function, showed: (i) reduced activation volume, supporting the study hypothesis, along with increased variance; (ii) brain activation patterns not seen in controls, increased pallido–thalamocortical loop activity during attempted movement and abnormal processing in primary sensorimotor cortex during imagined movement; and (iii) abnormal modulation of brain activity with change in movement task or force

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Summary

Introduction

Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains a major source of disability. A number of therapies are being developed to restore motor function in this population. Others aim to drive muscles or devices with signals derived from cortical recordings (Carmena et al, 2003; Friehs et al, 2004). Both approaches are predicated upon the assumption that brain motor functions remain capable of generating signals needed to drive limb movement, but this issue has received limited study after SCI. The afferent signals they generate, are normally associated with activation of primary motor cortex plus a broad sensorimotor network

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