Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses.

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Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses. / Lee, Hyun Joon; Jakovcevski, Igor; Radonjic, Nevena; Hoelters, Laura Sophie; Schachner, Melitta; Irintchev, Andrey.

In: EXP NEUROL, Vol. 216, No. 2, 2, 2009, p. 365-374.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lee, HJ, Jakovcevski, I, Radonjic, N, Hoelters, LS, Schachner, M & Irintchev, A 2009, 'Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses.', EXP NEUROL, vol. 216, no. 2, 2, pp. 365-374. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19150614?dopt=Citation>

APA

Lee, H. J., Jakovcevski, I., Radonjic, N., Hoelters, L. S., Schachner, M., & Irintchev, A. (2009). Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses. EXP NEUROL, 216(2), 365-374. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19150614?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Lee HJ, Jakovcevski I, Radonjic N, Hoelters LS, Schachner M, Irintchev A. Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses. EXP NEUROL. 2009;216(2):365-374. 2.

Bibtex

@article{597a2aa55d4b4623bbd73fb0271b7ae5,
title = "Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses.",
abstract = "Alterations in spinal reflexes and functional improvements occur after incomplete spinal cord injury but the relationship between these phenomena is not understood. Here we show that spontaneous functional recovery after compression injury of the spinal cord at low-thoracic level (Th10-12) in C57BL/6J mice is associated with a progressively increasing, over 3 months, excitability of the plantar H-reflex. The stimulation rate-sensitive H-reflex depression, already strongly reduced at 1 week after injury, when compared with non-injured mice, decreased further during the observation time period. Twelve weeks after injury, the degree of motor recovery estimated by single-frame motion analysis in individual animals correlated positively with their H-reflex responses at 2-Hz stimulation. Functional recovery and reflex alterations were accompanied by an increase in glycine/GABAergic and glutamatergic terminals around motoneuron cell bodies between 6 and 12 weeks after injury. Enhanced H-reflex responses at frequencies between 0.1 and 5 Hz were also observed in mice deficient in the extracellular matrix glycoprotein tenascin-R and the adhesion molecule close homolog of L1, mice previously shown to have better motor recovery after spinal cord injury than wild-type littermates. These results indicate that better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with alterations of the monosynaptic reflex pathway which facilitate motoneuron recruitment. Our observations support the view that plasticity of spinal circuitries underlies specific aspects of motor recovery and demonstrate the usefulness of H-reflex analyses in studies on spinal cord injury in mice.",
author = "Lee, {Hyun Joon} and Igor Jakovcevski and Nevena Radonjic and Hoelters, {Laura Sophie} and Melitta Schachner and Andrey Irintchev",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "216",
pages = "365--374",
journal = "EXP NEUROL",
issn = "0014-4886",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with enhanced H-reflex responses.

AU - Lee, Hyun Joon

AU - Jakovcevski, Igor

AU - Radonjic, Nevena

AU - Hoelters, Laura Sophie

AU - Schachner, Melitta

AU - Irintchev, Andrey

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Alterations in spinal reflexes and functional improvements occur after incomplete spinal cord injury but the relationship between these phenomena is not understood. Here we show that spontaneous functional recovery after compression injury of the spinal cord at low-thoracic level (Th10-12) in C57BL/6J mice is associated with a progressively increasing, over 3 months, excitability of the plantar H-reflex. The stimulation rate-sensitive H-reflex depression, already strongly reduced at 1 week after injury, when compared with non-injured mice, decreased further during the observation time period. Twelve weeks after injury, the degree of motor recovery estimated by single-frame motion analysis in individual animals correlated positively with their H-reflex responses at 2-Hz stimulation. Functional recovery and reflex alterations were accompanied by an increase in glycine/GABAergic and glutamatergic terminals around motoneuron cell bodies between 6 and 12 weeks after injury. Enhanced H-reflex responses at frequencies between 0.1 and 5 Hz were also observed in mice deficient in the extracellular matrix glycoprotein tenascin-R and the adhesion molecule close homolog of L1, mice previously shown to have better motor recovery after spinal cord injury than wild-type littermates. These results indicate that better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with alterations of the monosynaptic reflex pathway which facilitate motoneuron recruitment. Our observations support the view that plasticity of spinal circuitries underlies specific aspects of motor recovery and demonstrate the usefulness of H-reflex analyses in studies on spinal cord injury in mice.

AB - Alterations in spinal reflexes and functional improvements occur after incomplete spinal cord injury but the relationship between these phenomena is not understood. Here we show that spontaneous functional recovery after compression injury of the spinal cord at low-thoracic level (Th10-12) in C57BL/6J mice is associated with a progressively increasing, over 3 months, excitability of the plantar H-reflex. The stimulation rate-sensitive H-reflex depression, already strongly reduced at 1 week after injury, when compared with non-injured mice, decreased further during the observation time period. Twelve weeks after injury, the degree of motor recovery estimated by single-frame motion analysis in individual animals correlated positively with their H-reflex responses at 2-Hz stimulation. Functional recovery and reflex alterations were accompanied by an increase in glycine/GABAergic and glutamatergic terminals around motoneuron cell bodies between 6 and 12 weeks after injury. Enhanced H-reflex responses at frequencies between 0.1 and 5 Hz were also observed in mice deficient in the extracellular matrix glycoprotein tenascin-R and the adhesion molecule close homolog of L1, mice previously shown to have better motor recovery after spinal cord injury than wild-type littermates. These results indicate that better functional outcome of compression spinal cord injury in mice is associated with alterations of the monosynaptic reflex pathway which facilitate motoneuron recruitment. Our observations support the view that plasticity of spinal circuitries underlies specific aspects of motor recovery and demonstrate the usefulness of H-reflex analyses in studies on spinal cord injury in mice.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 216

SP - 365

EP - 374

JO - EXP NEUROL

JF - EXP NEUROL

SN - 0014-4886

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -