Abstract

Body weight-supported (BWS) robotic-assisted step training on a motorized treadmill is utilized with the aim to improve walking ability in people after damage to the spinal cord. However, the potential for reorganization of the injured human spinal neuronal circuitry with this intervention is not known. The objectives of this study were to determine changes in the soleus H-reflex modulation pattern and activation profiles of leg muscles during stepping after BWS robotic-assisted step training in people with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI). Fourteen people who had chronic clinically complete, motor complete, and motor incomplete SCI received an average of 45 training sessions, 5days per week, 1h per day. The soleus H-reflex was evoked and recorded via conventional methods at similar BWS levels and treadmill speeds before and after training. After BWS robotic-assisted step training, the soleus H-reflex was depressed at late stance, stance-to-swing transition, and swing phase initiation, allowing a smooth transition from stance to swing. The soleus H-reflex remained depressed at early and mid-swing phases of the step cycle promoting a reciprocal activation of ankle flexors and extensors. The spinal reflex circuitry reorganization was, however, more complex, with the soleus H-reflex from the right leg being modulated either in a similar or in an opposite manner to that observed in the left leg at a given phase of the step cycle after training. Last, BWS robotic-assisted step training changed the amplitude and onset of muscle activity during stepping, decreased the step duration, and improved the gait speed. BWS robotic-assisted step training reorganized spinal locomotor neuronal networks promoting a functional amplitude modulation of the soleus H-reflex and thus step progression. These findings support that spinal neuronal networks of persons with clinically complete, motor complete, or motor incomplete SCI have the potential to undergo an endogenous-mediated reorganization, and improve spinal reflex function and walking function with BWS robotic-assisted step training.

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