Abstract

Noisy waveforms, sampled from an episode of fictive locomotion (FL) and delivered to a dorsal root (DR), are a novel electrical stimulating protocol demonstrated as the most effective for generating the locomotor rhythm in the rat isolated spinal cord. The present study explored if stimulating protocols constructed by sampling real human locomotion could be equally efficient to activate these locomotor networks in vitro. This approach may extend the range of usable stimulation protocols and provide a wide palette of noisy waveforms for this purpose. To this end, recorded electromyogram (EMG) from leg muscles of walking adult volunteers provided a protocol named ReaListim (Real Locomotion-induced stimulation) that applied to a single DR successfully activated FL. The smoothed kinematic profile of the same gait failed to do so like nonphasic noisy patterns derived from standing and isometric contraction. Power spectrum analysis showed distinctive low-frequency domains in ReaListim, along with the high-frequency background noise. The current study indicates that limb EMG signals (recorded during human locomotion) applied to DR of the rat spinal cord are more effective than EMG traces taken during standing or isometric contraction of the same muscles to activate locomotor networks. Finally, EMGs recorded during various human motor tasks demonstrated that noisy waves of the same periodicity as ReaListim, could efficiently activate the in vitro central pattern generator (CPG), regardless of the motor task from which they had been sampled. These data outline new strategies to optimize functional stimulation of spinal networks after injury.

Highlights

  • One important goal for spinal network rehabilitation is the possibility to activate locomotor patterns with electrical stimuli applied to afferent inputs (Harkema et al 2011)

  • We aimed at assessing whether electrical stimulation with noisy waveforms corresponding to locomotor patterns of an adult volunteer was able to trigger the central pattern generator (CPG) of the in vitro neonatal rat spinal cord

  • Oscillations between L2 and L5 VRs on the two sides of the spinal cord were alternated, as confirmed by the value of the cross-correlograms illustrated in Figure 1D (CCF homolateral = À0.71; cross-correlogram function (CCF) homosegmental = À0.66), indicating, their characteristic fictive locomotion (FL) property

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Summary

Introduction

One important goal for spinal network rehabilitation is the possibility to activate locomotor patterns with electrical stimuli applied to afferent inputs (Harkema et al 2011). In the attempt to optimize the parameters for such a stimulation using as a test model the in vitro spinal cord preparation, we recently discovered a new stimulating protocol, named FListim (Fictive Locomotion-induced stimulation) based on high-frequency sampling of FL records from a ventral root (VR) of an isolated neonatal rat spinal cord and delivering it to a single dorsal root (DR) of the same preparation (Taccola 2011; Dose and Taccola 2012).

Methods
Results
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