Who is going to take this and determine applicability to humans and then create a therapy protocol?
Don't just tell me it occurs, tell me exactly how to make it occur. Otherwise I'll know you are lazy and wish to leave the hard work to us stroke-addled patients.
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nih/bxxu/~3/Q_ujIq_Y6A4/display.cgi
Whereas large injuries to the brain lead to considerable irreversible
functional impairments, smaller strokes or traumatic lesions are often
associated with good recovery. This recovery occurs spontaneously, and
there is ample evidence from preclinical studies to suggest that
adjacent undamaged areas (also known as peri-infarct regions) of the
cortex 'take over' control of the disrupted functions. In rodents,
sprouting of axons and dendrites has been observed in this region
following stroke, while reduced inhibition from horizontal or callosal
connections, or plastic changes in subcortical connections, could also
occur. The exact mechanisms underlying functional recovery after small-
to medium-sized strokes remain undetermined but are of utmost importance
for understanding the human situation and for designing effective
treatments and rehabilitation strategies. In the present study, we
selectively destroyed large parts of the forelimb motor and premotor
cortex of adult rats with an ischaemic injury. A behavioural test
requiring highly skilled, cortically controlled forelimb movements
showed that some animals recovered well from this lesion whereas others
did not. To investigate the reasons behind these differences, we used
anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques and intracortical
microstimulation. Retrograde tracing from the cervical spinal cord
showed a correlation between the number of cervically projecting
corticospinal neurons present in the hindlimb sensory-motor cortex and
good behavioural recovery. Anterograde tracing from the hindlimb
sensory-motor cortex also showed a positive correlation between the
degree of functional recovery and the sprouting of neurons from this
region into the cervical spinal cord. Finally, intracortical
microstimulation confirmed the positive correlation between rewiring of
the hindlimb sensory-motor cortex and the degree of forelimb motor
recovery. In conclusion, these experiments suggest that following stroke
to the forelimb motor cortex, cells in the hindlimb sensory-motor area
reorganize and become functionally connected to the cervical spinal
cord. These new connections, probably in collaboration with surviving
forelimb neurons and more complex indirect connections via the
brainstem, play an important role for the recovery of cortically
controlled behaviours like skilled forelimb reaching.
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