Electrical Stimulation of Distal Tibial Nerve During Stance Phase of Walking May Reverse Effects of Unilateral Paw Pad Anesthesia in the Cat.

IF 0.9 4区 医学 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES Motor Control Pub Date : 2022-10-31 Print Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1123/mc.2022-0096
Hangue Park, Alexander N Klishko, Kyunggeune Oh, Celina Zhang, Gina Grenga, Kinsey R Herrin, John F Dalton, Robert S Kistenberg, Michel A Lemay, Mark Pitkin, Stephen P DeWeerth, Boris I Prilutsky
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Cutaneous feedback from feet is involved in regulation of muscle activity during locomotion, and the lack of this feedback results in motor deficits. We tested the hypothesis that locomotor changes caused by local unilateral anesthesia of paw pads in the cat could be reduced/reversed by electrical stimulation of cutaneous and proprioceptive afferents in the distal tibial nerve during stance. Several split-belt conditions were investigated in four adult female cats. In addition, we investigated the effects of similar distal tibial nerve stimulation on overground walking of one male cat that had a transtibial, bone-anchored prosthesis for 29 months and, thus, had no cutaneous/proprioceptive feedback from the foot. In all treadmill conditions, cats walked with intact cutaneous feedback (control), with right fore- and hindpaw pads anesthetized by lidocaine injections, and with a combination of anesthesia and electrical stimulation of the ipsilateral distal tibial nerve during the stance phase at 1.2× threshold of afferent activation. Electrical stimulation of the distal tibial nerve during the stance phase of walking with anesthetized ipsilateral paw pads reversed or significantly reduced the effects of paw pad anesthesia on several kinematic variables, including lateral center of mass shift, cycle and swing durations, and duty factor. We also found that stimulation of the residual distal tibial nerve in the prosthetic hindlimb often had different effects on kinematics compared with stimulation of the intact hindlimb with paw anesthetized. We suggest that stimulation of cutaneous and proprioceptive afferents in the distal tibial nerve provides functionally meaningful motion-dependent sensory feedback, and stimulation responses depend on limb conditions.

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步行站立期对胫骨远端神经的电刺激可能逆转猫单侧爪垫麻醉的效果。
足部的皮肤反馈参与了运动过程中肌肉活动的调节,缺乏这种反馈会导致运动缺陷。我们检验了这样一种假设,即猫爪垫的局部单侧麻醉引起的运动变化可以在站立过程中通过电刺激胫骨远端神经的皮肤和本体感觉传入来减少/逆转。研究了四只成年母猫的几种分带情况。此外,我们研究了类似的胫骨远端神经刺激对一只公猫地上行走的影响,该公猫使用经胫骨骨锚定假体29个月,因此没有来自足部的皮肤/本体感觉反馈。在所有跑步机条件下,猫行走时都有完整的皮肤反馈(对照),右前爪和后爪垫被利多卡因注射麻醉,并在1.2倍传入激活阈值的站立阶段对同侧胫骨远端神经进行麻醉和电刺激。在用麻醉的同侧爪垫行走的站立阶段,对胫骨远端神经进行电刺激,可以逆转或显著降低爪垫麻醉对几个运动学变量的影响,包括横向质心偏移、周期和摆动持续时间以及占空因数。我们还发现,与用爪子麻醉刺激完整后肢相比,刺激假肢后肢中残留的胫骨远端神经通常对运动学产生不同的影响。我们认为,对胫骨远端神经中皮肤和本体感觉传入的刺激提供了功能上有意义的运动依赖性感觉反馈,刺激反应取决于肢体条件。
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来源期刊
Motor Control
Motor Control 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Motor Control (MC), a peer-reviewed journal, provides a multidisciplinary examination of human movement across the lifespan. To keep you abreast of current developments in the field of motor control, it offers timely coverage of important topics, including issues related to motor disorders. This international journal publishes many types of research papers, from clinical experimental to modeling and theoretical studies. These papers come from such varied disciplines as biomechanics, kinesiology, neurophysiology, neuroscience, psychology, physical medicine, and rehabilitation. Motor Control, the official journal of the International Society of Motor Control, is designed to provide a multidisciplinary forum for the exchange of scientific information on the control of human movement across the lifespan, including issues related to motor disorders. Motor Control encourages submission of papers from a variety of disciplines including, but not limited to, biomechanics, kinesiology, neurophysiology, neuroscience, psychology, physical medicine, and rehabilitation. This peer-reviewed journal publishes a wide variety of types of research papers including clinical experimental, modeling, and theoretical studies. To be considered for publication, papers should clearly demonstrate a contribution to the understanding of control of movement. In addition to publishing research papers, Motor Control publishes review articles, quick communications, commentaries, target articles, and book reviews. When warranted, an entire issue may be devoted to a specific topic within the area of motor control.
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