Abstract

A study was made of the stepping pattern formation in decerebrated and in chronic spinal cats during epidural stimulation (ES). The hindlimb stepping performance depended on the parameters of ES and afferent input. At non-optimal ES parameters, no stepping was induced, only muscle reflexes followed the stimulation rhythm. Optimized ES (3–5 Hz, 50–100 µA for decerebrated and 20–30 Hz, 150–250 µA for spinal cats) evoked coordinated stepping movements at a natural rate (0.8–1 Hz) accompanied by electromyographic burst activity of the corresponding muscles. In decerebrated cats, the bursts are formed owing to modulation of early responses and the late polysynaptic activity. In chronic spinal cats, this process is mainly due to amplitude modulation of the early responses. Formation of the stepping pattern in decerebrated cats involves spinal interneurons responsible for the polysynaptic activity, which allows its correction based on processing the afferent signals. Activation of this system in chronic spinal cats can be realized by afferent stimulation alone, without ES.

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