detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1002...

Tema
Research Articles
Autor
Plautz, Erik J. Barbay, Scott Frost, Shawn B. Stowe, Ann M. Dancause, Numa Zoubina, Elena V. Eisner-Janowicz, Ines Guggenmos, David J. Nudo, Randolph J.
Langue
en
Editor

Society for Neuroscience

Categoría

The Journal of Neuroscience

Año

2023

fecha de cotización

20/9/2023

Palabras clave
relationship representations monkeys primary significantly squirrel nonlinear distal motor weeks forelimb reorganization pmd pmv m1 map maps premotor recovery injury
Métrico

Resumen

Recovery of motor function after stroke is accompanied by reorganization of movement representations in spared cortical motor regions.

It is widely assumed that map reorganization parallels recovery, suggesting a causal relationship.

We examined this assumption by measuring changes in motor representations in eight male and six female squirrel monkeys in the first few weeks after injury, a time when motor recovery is most rapid.

Maps of movement representations were derived using intracortical microstimulation techniques in primary motor cortex (M1), ventral premotor cortex (PMv), and dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) in 14 adult squirrel monkeys before and after a focal infarct in the M1 distal forelimb area.

Maps were derived at baseline and at either 2 (n = 7) or 3 weeks (n = 7) postinfarct.

In PMv the forelimb maps remained unchanged at 2 weeks but contracted significantly (−42.4%) at 3 weeks.

In PMd the forelimb maps expanded significantly (+110.6%) at 2 weeks but contracted significantly (−57.4%) at 3 weeks.

Motor deficits were equivalent at both time points.

These results highlight two features of plasticity after M1 lesions.

First, significant contraction of distal forelimb motor maps in both PMv and PMd is evident by 3 weeks.

Second, an unpredictable nonlinear pattern of reorganization occurs in the distal forelimb representation in PMd, first expanding at 2 weeks, and then contracting at 3 weeks postinjury.

Together with previous results demonstrating reliable map expansions in PMv several weeks to months after M1 injury, the subacute time period may represent a critical window for the timing of therapeutic interventions.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The relationship between motor recovery and motor map reorganization after cortical injury has rarely been examined in acute/subacute periods.

In nonhuman primates, premotor maps were examined at 2 and 3 weeks after injury to primary motor cortex.

Although maps are known to expand late after injury, the present study demonstrates early map expansion at 2 weeks (dorsal premotor cortex) followed by contraction at 3 weeks (dorsal and ventral premotor cortex).

This nonlinear map reorganization during a time of gradual behavioral recovery suggests that the relationship between map plasticity and motor recovery is much more complex than previously thought.

It also suggests that rehabilitative motor training may have its most potent effects during this early dynamic phase of map reorganization.

Plautz, Erik J.,Barbay, Scott,Frost, Shawn B.,Stowe, Ann M.,Dancause, Numa,Zoubina, Elena V.,Eisner-Janowicz, Ines,Guggenmos, David J.,Nudo, Randolph J., 2023, Spared Premotor Areas Undergo Rapid Nonlinear Changes in Functional Organization Following a Focal Ischemic Infarct in Primary Motor Cortex of Squirrel Monkeys, Society for Neuroscience

Compartir

Fuente

Artículos recomendados por ES/IODE IA

High-Frequency Repetitive Magnetic Stimulation at the Sacrum Alleviates Chronic Constipation in Parkinson’s Patients
magnetic stimulation parkinson’s significant patients scale sacrum pd hf-rms chronic constipation scores
The mechanism of PFK-1 in the occurrence and development of bladder cancer by regulating ZEB1 lactylation
bladder cancer pfk-1 zeb1 lactylation glycolysis inhibits lactate glucose bc pfk-1 cancer lactylation cells bladder