Based on this what does your doctor recommend to make sure neuroplasticity is working toward your 100% recovery?
http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pcbi.1003259
Abstract
Lasting
alterations in sensory input trigger massive structural and functional
adaptations in cortical networks. The principles governing these
experience-dependent changes are, however, poorly understood. Here, we
examine whether a simple rule based on the neurons' need for homeostasis
in electrical activity may serve as driving force for cortical
reorganization. According to this rule, a neuron creates new spines and
boutons when its level of electrical activity is below a homeostatic
set-point and decreases the number of spines and boutons when its
activity exceeds this set-point. In addition, neurons need a minimum
level of activity to form spines and boutons. Spine and bouton formation
depends solely on the neuron's own activity level, and synapses are
formed by merging spines and boutons independently of activity. Using a
novel computational model, we show that this simple growth rule produces
neuron and network changes as observed in the visual cortex after focal
retinal lesions. In the model, as in the cortex, the turnover of
dendritic spines was increased strongest in the center of the lesion
projection zone, while axonal boutons displayed a marked overshoot
followed by pruning. Moreover, the decrease in external input was
compensated for by the formation of new horizontal connections, which
caused a retinotopic remapping. Homeostatic regulation may provide a
unifying framework for understanding cortical reorganization, including
network repair in degenerative diseases or following focal stroke.
Author Summary
The
adult brain is less hard-wired than traditionally thought. About ten
percent of synapses in the mature visual cortex is continually replaced
by new ones (structural plasticity). This percentage greatly increases
after lasting changes in visual input. Due to the topographically
organized nerve connections from the retina in the eye to the primary
visual cortex in the brain, a small circumscribed lesion in the retina
leads to a defined area in the cortex that is deprived of input. Recent
experimental studies have revealed that axonal sprouting and dendritic
spine turnover are massively increased in and around the cortical area
that is deprived of input. However, the driving forces for this
structural plasticity remain unclear. Using a novel computational model,
we examine whether the need for activity homeostasis of individual
neurons may drive cortical reorganization after lasting changes in input
activity. We show that homeostatic growth rules indeed give rise to
structural and functional reorganization of neuronal networks similar to
the cortical reorganization observed experimentally. Understanding the
principles of structural plasticity may eventually lead to novel
treatment strategies for stimulating functional reorganization after
brain damage and neurodegeneration.
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