You'll have to demand your doctor contact these researchers so s/he can create a stroke protocol for your motor recovery.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22343892
Abstract
Many lines of evidence suggest
that memory in the mammalian brain is stored with distinct
spatiotemporal patterns. Despite recent progresses in identifying
neuronal populations involved in memory coding, the synapse-level
mechanism is still poorly understood. Computational models and
electrophysiological data have shown that functional clustering of
synapses along dendritic branches leads to nonlinear summation of
synaptic inputs and greatly expands the computing power of a neural
network. However, whether neighbouring synapses are involved in encoding
similar memory and how task-specific cortical networks develop during
learning remain elusive. Using transcranial two-photon microscopy, we
followed apical dendrites of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the motor
cortex while mice practised novel forelimb skills. Here we show that a
third of new dendritic spines (postsynaptic structures of most
excitatory synapses) formed during the acquisition phase of learning
emerge in clusters, and that most such clusters are neighbouring spine
pairs. These clustered new spines are more likely to persist throughout
prolonged learning sessions, and even long after training stops, than
non-clustered counterparts. Moreover, formation of new spine clusters
requires repetition of the same motor task, and the emergence of
succedent new spine(s) accompanies the strengthening of the first new
spine in the cluster. We also show that under control conditions new
spines appear to avoid existing stable spines, rather than being
uniformly added along dendrites. However, succedent new spines in
clusters overcome such a spatial constraint and form in close vicinity
to neighbouring stable spines. Our findings suggest that clustering of
new synapses along dendrites is induced by repetitive activation of the
cortical circuitry during learning, providing a structural basis for
spatial coding of motor memory in the mammalian brain.
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