|
|
||||||||
Spinal Cord Injury Special Series |
M MacKay-Lyons, PT, PhD, is Assistant Professor, School of Physiotherapy, Dalhousie University, 5869 University Ave, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, B3H 3J5 (m.mackay-lyons{at}dal.ca)
Submitted May 5, 2000;
Accepted September 12, 2001
| Abstract |
|---|
Key Words: Central pattern generator Locomotion Movement sciences Rehabilitation Spinal cord
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Today, the existence of networks of nerve cells producing specific, rhythmic movements, without conscious effort and without the aid of peripheral afferent feedback, is indisputable for a large number of vertebrates. These specialized neural circuits are referred to as "neural oscillators" or "central pattern generators" (CPGs). Research on CPGs has flourished, in part, because the repetitive, stereotypical nature of the resulting movements is conducive to attaining stable, reliable data. In addition, the rhythmic activities generated by the circuits are often involved in control of vital functions. Circuits for breathing, chewing, and swallowing are located in the brain stem,3,4 whereas those for locomotive functions are contained in the spinal cord.5 This review focuses on the spinal cord generators (spinal CPGs) of locomotion.
Evidence for spinal circuits has been obtained from a host of invertebrate and vertebrate preparations. Although there is always the question of whether data obtained from one species of animals can be applied to other species, the general neural organization of CPGs subserving locomotion appears to be quite similar in all the species studied.6 This is indeed surprising considering the very dissimilar modes of locomotion, from swimming, to walking, running, hopping, and flying. Even the coordination patterns of the upper and lower extremities in human bipedal locomotion have features in common with those of quadrupedal locomotion.7 Evidence of pattern generation derived from humans is, by necessity, indirect, and at present, quite rudimentary.8,9 Although studies of animals often involve the use of intrusive, unnatural conditions, the benefits of using simpler animal models are the absence of complexity (relative to the human) and easier access and manipulation of the circuits. Although studies of invertebrates have contributed substantial insights into the mechanisms of CPGs, this review is limited to studies using vertebrate models.
The fact that investigators have been able to obtain rhythmic movements in preparations devoid of supraspinal inputs1012 and sensory inputs1315 should not be interpreted as meaning that such inputs are not important in pattern generation by animals with intact spinal systems. Indeed, the CPG is only part of the motor control system. Furthermore, it has not been proven that CPG activity is essential to functional movement. The interplay between central and sensory influences is critical in the production of adaptive behaviors, as will be addressed in this review of the evidence of locomotor CPGs.
| Evidence of Locomotor CPGs |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Research on animals that have undergone transection of the spinal cord has revealed that the spinal cord, when excited by cutaneous stimulation, limb movements, or pharmacological agents, can produce stereotyped rhythmic movements. Following complete transection of the thoracic spine in adult cats, alternating and coordinated movements of the hind limbs can be achieved on a treadmill.17,18 These movements persist even if afferent input from the involved limbs has been abolished.19 Moreover, following application of paralytic agents (eg, curare) to block receptors at the neuromuscular junctioneliminating movement and therefore feedback of movementlocomotor patterns can still be recorded in ventral roots or motoneurons.20 Because these rhythmical patterns occur in the absence of any movements, such neural activity is referred to as "fictive locomotion." Studies of the combined use of deafferentation and paralysis have demonstrated that sensory input is not necessary in the generation of these stereotyped locomotor patterns.20 These findings do not imply, however, that, under normal conditions, sensory feedback is unimportant for functional locomotion.
Isolated nervous system preparations have also yielded evidence of autonomous functioning of the spinal cord in generating locomotor patterns (Fig. 1A).21 Using a neonatal rat spinal cordhind-limb preparation, Cazalets et al22 observed that bath application of neuroactive substances (eg, serotonin [5-HT] and N-methyl-D-aspartate [NMDA]) used to induce locomotor-like rhythmicity triggered fictive locomotor patterns in the recordings from the lumbar ventral roots (Fig. 1B). Magnuson and Trinder23 used a similar preparation to demonstrate that electrical stimulation of a descending locomotor pathway in the low cervical region caused alternating activity of ipsilateral and contralateral lumbar ventral roots in a pattern consistent with locomotion.
|
Do CPGs exist in humans? The "best guess" at this point is cautious affirmation. The evidence that exists is necessarily indirect. For example, Calancie et al provided support that they described as "the first well-defined example of a central rhythm generator for stepping in the adult human."31(p1143) Their claim may have been overstated in that it was based on a study of a single person with a chronic incomplete injury to the cervical spinal cord. Involuntary rhythmic movements of his lower extremities were triggered when he was positioned supine with the hips in extension and were abolished by flexing the hips, by standing, and while sleeping in the supine position. More recently, Dimitrijevic and colleagues9 elicited patterned, locomotor-like activity in subjects with long-standing complete spinal cord injury (SCI) by applying epidural electrical stimulation to the L2 segment. Although these observations proffer some evidence that an involuntary locomotor pattern can be generated in humans, they fail to isolate the neural circuitry responsible for the movements. Further testimony to the existence of locomotor CPGs in humans comes from studies of gait retraining following SCI, a topic addressed later in this review.
| Supraspinal Influences on Locomotor CPGs |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Grillner32 cited a 1966 experiment in which Russian neurophysiologists demonstrated that decerebrate cats could walk when subjected to repetitive electrical stimulation of the brain stem. Moreover, the speed and mode of locomotion (ie, walking, trotting, galloping) were dependent on the strength of stimulation. Bjursten and colleagues10 reported that the locomotion of cats that had the cerebral cortex removed as neonates was purposeful and similar in pattern to that of cats with intact cornices. Other studies using decerebrate animals have produced similar findings.11,12
Although the interaction of supraspinal influences and CPGs remains unclear, 2 points seem to be generally agreed upon. The first is that supraspinal control of the spinal locomotor CPGs appears to be similar for all classes of vertebrates.33 From lampreys to primates, nuclei in the mesencephalon, referred to as the "mesencephalic locomotor region" (MLR), initiate locomotion through activation of lower brain-stem reticulospinal neurons.34 In the cat, 2 distinct descending tracts are involvedthe medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF), with cells originating in the medial pontomedullary reticular formation, and the lateral vestibulospinal tract, with cells originating in the lateral vestibular (Deiters') nucleus.35 Transmission to flexor motoneurons is facilitated during the flexion phase of stepping, and transmission to extensor motoneurons is facilitated during the extensor phase of MLR-evoked fictive stepping.28 Gossard et al28 suggested, but did not demonstrate, that this modulation may involve premotoneuronal convergence of locomotor CPG and descending inputs onto common interneurons, such that the descending input "shapes" the output patterns generated by the CPG.
The second point is that the supraspinal-CPG interaction is far more complex than previously thought. Computer modeling suggests that the feedforward input from reticulospinal neurons can have variable and unpredictable effects on spinal CPGs.36 Feedback via spinoreticular neurons and inputs from other regions of the brain appear to be necessary to stabilize the locomotor rhythm.37 Grillner and Matsushima38 noted that the brain stem, as a site of convergence of several inputs, appears to provide a locomotion-related gating function involving spinoreticular input from the CPGs together with other forms of input, such as from the visual and vestibular systems. As a consequence, the animal's behavior is more responsive to its environmental context.
Orlovsky39 identified 5 functions of supraspinal areas in the control of locomotion: activating spinal locomotor CPGs, controlling the intensity of CPG operation, maintaining equilibrium during locomotion, adapting limb movement to external conditions, and coordinating locomotion with other motor acts. Spinal CPGs are left to generate the complex patterns of muscle activity required for locomotion. Among the main supraspinal centers involved are the sensorimotor cortex, the cerebellum, and the basal ganglia. After sustaining lesions of the sensorimotor cortex or the corticospinal tract, cats can perform tasks such as walking and running at varying speeds uphill and downhill reasonably well.39 However, with mobility tasks of increasing complexity, the need for an intact sensorimotor cortex becomes apparent. For example, Figure 2 shows the activity recorded from a pyramidal tract neuron in the motor cortex during locomotion over a level surface ("control") or over a surface with barriers of varying proximity. As the distance between barriers is decrease, the bursting activity of the neuron increases. According to Nelson,40 studies and computer simulations of bidirectional interactions between motor (precentral) and sensory (postcentral) areas are important in understanding cerebrocortical involvement in the preparation for, and execution of, movement. Traditionally, the focus has been on postcentral to precentral connections that provide a feedback pathway, but current research is addressing the role of precentral to postcentral projections in shaping sensation and perception via movement-generated mechanisms.40
|
The basal ganglia are now considered as integral parts of larger, distinct circuits involving the cerebral cortex and thalamus, and they have been implicated in a wide variety of motor functions, including the planning, initiation, execution, and termination of motor programs as well as motor learning.44 Both the cerebellum and basal ganglia seem to play an important role in timing of sequential muscle activation, with the basal ganglia operating on a longer time scale. Purposeful and successful movement through the environment requires the cooperation of spinal mechanisms and supraspinal centers. Returning to the 5 functions identified by Orlovsky,39 it would appear that innumerable parallel processes are in place within supraspinal centers to facilitate these functions.
| Influence of Sensory Afferents on Locomotor CPGs |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Pearson6 identified 3 potential roles for afferent feedback in the production of rhythmic movements, and all 3 roles involve adapting movement to changes in the internal and external environments. The first role is that of reinforcing CPG activities, particularly those involving load-bearing muscles, such as the hind-limb extensor muscles during the stance phase of gait. The second role is a timing function whereby the sensory feedback provides information to ensure that the motor output is appropriate for the biomechanical state of the moving body part in terms of position, direction of movement, and force. The third role is that of facilitating phase transitions in rhythmic movements, purportedly to ensure that a certain phase of the movement is not initiated until the appropriate biomechanical state of the moving part has been achieved.
Low-threshold cutaneous receptors exert an excitatory influence on locomotion in the cat model in a phase-dependent manner, thus illustrating the second role of sensory afferents identified by Pearson6that of a timing function. For example, stimulation of the cutaneous nerve supplying the dorsum of the foot typically enhances extensor activity during the stance phase and flexor activity during the swing phase during fictive locomotion of decerebrate-paralyzed cats45 or decerebrate cats with transected spinal cords.46 Use of animals with transected spinal cords in the study by LaBella et al46 ruled out a substantial supraspinal contribution to this reflex reversal. Convergence of control information from locomotor CPGs onto segmental interneurons in the oligosynaptic pathway from cutaneous receptors to alpha motoneurons has been postulated to be the source of the reflex modulation observed in the cat forelimb47 and cat hind limb48 during fictive locomotion.
The issue of phase-dependent modulation of muscle stretch receptor inputs during human locomotion has been reviewed extensively.49,50 Phasic modulation of Ia input has been demonstrated by changes in magnitude of stretch reflexes and of H-reflexes (the electrical analogue of the stretch reflex) over the course of the gait cycle, with the greatest attenuation occurring during flexion (Fig. 3A).51 Moreover, the extent of modulation is task-dependent, being greater during walking than during quiet standing and greater still during running (Fig. 3B).52 An increased reflex attenuation during tasks requiring a greater electromyographic (EMG) output implies a premotoneuronal mechanism, probably presynaptic inhibition, which reduces, via a second neural input, the amount of neurotransmitter released at the presynaptic terminal of the Ia axon.49 Results of computer modeling support this supposition.53 The principal source of this presynaptic inhibition seems to be Ia afferents from hip and knee extensor muscles, because the extent of attenuation is velocity-dependent (Fig. 3C).49 Furthermore, the primary neural route seems to be at the spinal level, with reflex attenuation persisting, albeit often reduced, in subjects with complete transections of the spinal cord.54 Thus, an important role for muscle spindle afferents is beginning to emergegating the strength of Ia afferent synaptic input onto target neurons during movement. The influence of the CPGs on the Ia-derived gating mechanism remains unknown. From a functional perspective, Brooke and colleagues49 postulated that during quiet stance, activation of the soleus muscle stretch reflex helps maintain anteroposterior stability, whereas during locomotion, decreasing the gain of these resistive reflexes prevents them from impeding lower-extremity movements.
|
A revised notion of the influence of Ib afferent feedback to the locomotor CPGs is beginning to emerge. Stimulation of Ib afferents from the Golgi tendon organs (GTOs) of ankle and knee extensors during fictive locomotion in cats with acutely transected spinal cords evoked excitation of extensor motoneurons, rather than the anticipated Ib autogenic inhibition59 (Fig. 4A). The authors cautioned that findings attained used dopa-induced fictive locomotion may not reflect the normal function of proprioceptive feedback. However, in subsequent studies using MLR-activated fictive locomotion45 and spontaneously evoked locomotion60 of decerebrate cats, similar results were found. Guertin and colleagues45 concluded that both Ia and Ib afferents from extensor muscles help to shape the amplitude, duration, and timing of ipsilateral extensor activity. In an attempt to explain the unexpected findings regarding the effects of Ib afferents, Pearson56 hypothesized that, in addition to the disynaptic inhibitory pathway from group Ib afferents to extensor motoneurons, there may be 2 additional pathways that open only during locomotor activitya disynaptic excitatory pathway from group Ib afferents to extensor motoneurons and an oligosynaptic pathway from group Ib afferents to extensor motoneurons via the CPG extensor "half center" (Fig. 4B). Rossignol and Dubuc55 advocated that with this example of possible "reflex reversal" from a static to a dynamic condition, classic notions of reflex actions should be revisited with regard to rhythmic motor behaviors.
|
An exciting new area of research in neuroplasticity involves the possibility of plastic changes in reflex pathways at the level of the spinal cord. Whelan and Pearson62 demonstrated in the decerebrate cat that when the nerve to the lateral gastrocnemius-soleus muscle is cut, reflex activity from the synergistic medial gastrocnemius muscle is heightened. Moreover, this compensatory strategy to control the timing of the step cycle persists after spinal cord transection at the T12 level.
From the evidence to date, it seems likely that sensory inputsparticularly limb loading and proprioceptionprovide the information required by the CPG circuitry to generate functional and adaptive locomotion. Various afferent pathways (eg, Ia, Ib, II, and cutaneous afferents) modify the neuronal composition of the active CPG circuits and synaptic connections within the circuits, thereby "shaping" the final motor program producing rhythmic movements.3
| Influence of Neuromodulators on CPGs |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Despite the seemingly ubiquitous presence of neuromodulators in vertebrate motor systems, the function of specific modulators has been established mainly in lampreys and neonatal rats with transected spinal cords. Neurotransmitters (eg, glutamate,
-aminobutyric acid [GABA], glycine), as well as the neuromodulators (eg, serotonin [5-HT], dopamine), have been shown to influence locomotor CPG behavior.22,63 In addition, peptides (eg, neurotensin; somatostatin; tachykinins, including substance P) exert neuromodulatory effects on the locomotor CPGs, although their actions are not yet well defined.65,66
| Coordination Among Locomotor CPGs |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The "shared interneurons" hypothesis depicts CPG networks as systems wherein complex movements are configured from pools of multipotent interneurons.30 Dickinson30 suggested that pattern generators should be defined by the behaviors they produce rather than by anatomical boundaries. Extensive "sculpting" of CPG networks by using different combinations of basic cellular and synaptic processes creates a variety of alternative functional circuits, each with the capacity to generate a distinct motor pattern within a family of function-related behaviors.6,67 For example, analysis of rhythmic activities in cats (eg, locomotion. scratching) suggests that many common interneurons are shared in the generation of these motor tasks.16 Similarly, commonalties in the kinematic analysis of hatching, walking, and swimming in chicks suggest that these distinct, but related, motor behaviors may result from reconfigurations of interneurons within a common CPG pool.68 Influences on CPGs that have been discussed (eg, sensory afferents, supraspinal influences, neuromodulators) have been implicated in "circuit-switching" mechanisms3,6; however, details of the mechanisms are not yet known.
Little evidence exists concerning coordination between segments or limbs in human gait. Alterations in coupling patterns between upper and lower extremities associated with changes in walking speed implicate interaction among CPGs.7 Using a split-belt treadmill protocol to study interlimb coordination, Dietz and colleagues8 found that increasing the ipsilateral speed while maintaining the contralateral speed was associated with increases in ipsilateral gastrocnemius muscle and contralateral tibialis anterior muscle EMG activity. These findings are consistent with a model of flexible coupling of separate locomotor centers controlling each limb. In a subsequent study of split-belt locomotion, the researchers found adaptation to a difference in belt speeds within 12 to 15 strides, and after a short interval of walking with a common belt speed, readaptation to different belt speeds occurred within 1 to 3 strides.69 However, this motor learning effect was not transferred to the other side when the fast and slow sides were reversed. The inference was that for "CPG learning" to occur, interaction between side-specific proprioceptors and spinal interneuronal circuits is necessary.
| Locomotor Retraining Studies in Animals |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Barbeau and Rossignol18 reported that although 5 adult cats with transection of the spinal cord at the T13 level initially demonstrated a poorly organized hind-limb stepping pattern during treadmill walking with tail support, they demonstrated a "near-normal" pattern after 3 to 4 weeks of daily treadmill training. Furthermore, by the end of the trial, the cats were able to adjust the locomotor cycle to adapt to varying treadmill speeds. This study, as well as other studies conducted during the same period,70,71 countered the prevailing doctrine that an animal will recover more completely from a neurological injury sustained as a neonate than as an adult.
In the study by Barbeau and Rossignol,18 the hind limbs of the cats with spinal cord transection were too weak in the first post-surgical week to make early treadmill training efficacious. The same investigative team later attempted to facilitate more effective early training in a single cat by administering intraperitoneal injections of a noradrenergic drug (clonidine) each day from the second day to the ninth day after transection of the spinal cord to activate locomotor CPGs.72 After each injection, the cat was trained on the treadmill with a progressive increase in hind-limb weight bearing (Fig. 5A). Clonidine appeared to enhance the training effect in that the resulting locomotor pattern was similar to that achieved after 3 to 4 weeks of training in the previous study (Figs. 5B and 5C). In addition, the improved pattern continued without further clonidine injections. Similar results were obtained recently on 5 cats with transection of the spinal cord at the T13 level that were subjected to the same training protocol used by Barbeau et al72 but to a higher dose of clonidine.73 Unfortunately, the protocol did not include cats that were similarly trained but without clonidine injections, and an analysis of overground walking was not conducted.
|
Use of treadmill training to enhance recovery of walking in animals with transected spinal cords implies some use-dependent plasticity in spinal pathways involved in locomotor generation. Few studies have demonstrated functional plasticity of the spinal cord after changes in the supraspinal or peripheral inputs. One such study involved superimposed spinal cord transection in cats that had undergone previous unilateral neurectomy of the ankle flexor nerves.75 Following spinal cord transection, the cats retained an asymmetric gait pattern with the compensatory strategy of knee hyperflexion on the neurectomized side. Another cat that underwent spinal cord transection first and then neurectomy did not exhibit this compensatory pattern. These findings intimate that plastic changes may have taken place in the spinal circuitry to maintain locomotion following the peripheral nerve lesion.
Edgerton and colleagues76 provided evidence that they interpreted as supportive of the notion that training produces functional changes or "motor learning" in the spinal motor-generating circuitry. They reported that adult cats with transection of the spinal cord at the T13 level that were trained to stand on their hind limbs had difficulty stepping and that other cats with transection of the spinal cord at the T13 level that were trained to step had difficulty maintaining a standing posture. The researchers argued that the specificity of the training effect on recovery of mobility was neural in origin as opposed to muscular in origin because similar musculature was involved in both tasks. They also noted that although both groups had 30-minute training sessions daily during the interval from 1 month to 6 months following transection, performance peaked between 2 months to 4 months after transection. A common persistent abnormality in the "stepping" group was abnormal coactivation of hind-limb flexor and extensor muscles.
| Locomotor Retraining Studies in Humans |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Another consideration precluding a literal extrapolation of findings from animal studies to humans is the greater inability of humans to maintain an upright posture following SCI.76 Even if neuronal activity were to be restored at the spinal level, the usefulness of it may be limited by the loss of equilibrium control. Nevertheless, studies of locomotor retraining in humans with impairment of the central nervous system have yielded some positive results (see review by Barbeau et al79). Visintin and Barbeau80 reported that in 7 people with incomplete SCI, treadmill walking with 40% of their body weight supported using an overhead frame had an immediate normalizing effect on both kinematic and kinetic aspects of the gait pattern. The authors concluded that the use of body weight support (BWS) could be an important factor in retraining locomotor abilities in people with SCI. They proposed that the mechanism involved is a decrease in the load on the extensor muscles, which facilitates inactivation of Ib afferents during the stance phase and earlier onset of the swing phase.
A recent single-subject study with an A-B-A design (6-week baseline measurement phase, 6-week treatment phase, 3-week remeasurement phase) was carried out using a subject with an incomplete C56 lesion sustained 7 months prior to the study.81 The training protocol involved constant use of 32% BWS during treadmill walking for 30 minutes per day, 3 days per week for 6 weeks. Small, but statistically significant (and purportedly clinically meaningful), improvements were found in walking speed and in some of the spatial variables of gait.
Wernig and Muller82 trained 8 people with chronic, incomplete SCIs using "Laufband locomotion" (treadmill walking) for between 6 weeks to 20 months, beginning with 40% BWS. They reported that by the end of training, EMG activity in lower-limb flexor and extensor muscles increased during locomotion but not when measured in a supine position. Overground walking without BWS improved following the intervention, offsetting a concern that training effects attained with supported treadmill walking may not carry over during walking under more natural conditions. In comparison with overground ambulation, supported treadmill walking requires fewer postural adjustments and less active plantar flexion, the latter because passive movement by the treadmill belt can augment plantar-flexor activity.81
Wernig and colleagues83 extended their first study using a similar training protocol but with a larger sample (77 subjects with acute or chronic incomplete SCIs and 7 subjects with "functionally complete" paraplegia). Following acute rehabilitation using treadmill walking with BWS for 3 to 20 weeks, 33 (92%) of 36 subjects who initially were wheelchair-dependent could walk independently, whereas the same level of mobility was achieved in only 12 (50%) of 24 comparable subjects who underwent conventional therapy. Improvements in the former group were not accompanied by alterations in muscle force. However, the group assignment was not randomized, and the length of intervention was not consistent. None of the subjects with complete paraplegia improved with Laufband therapy.
In the same year, Dietz et al84 reported findings of another BWS-treadmill study involving 10 subjects with complete paraplegia and 3 subjects with paraparesis. Important details such as the chronicity of the lesions and the length of the training period were omitted from the report. The 3 subjects with paraparesis benefited from training with respect to improved overground stepping and normalization of locomotor EMG activity (Fig. 6). However, in contrast to the lack of improvement in subjects with paraplegia noted by Wernig et al,83 4 of the subjects with paraplegia demonstrated decreased coactivation of ankle dorsiflexors and plantar flexors and increased, albeit still abnormally low, gastrocnemius muscle EMG activity during stance following training with as much as 70% BWS. The authors concluded that "complex bilateral leg muscle activation combined with coordinated stepping movements is demonstrated in patients with complete paraplegia."84(p574) This statement, in my view, is misleading because advancement of the limbs on the treadmill could only be accomplished by the assistance of another person throughout the training period. Stewart and colleagues85 showed that assisted movements of the lower extremities during supported treadmill walking induced EMG activity because of the rhythmic passive stretches of the muscles. Furthermore, when this assistance was withdrawn, the EMG pattern also ceased. Consequently, the findings by Dietz and colleagues84 concerning subjects with complete SCIs may have been due to experimental artifact.
|
In a subsequent study, Hesse et al87 compared floor walking with treadmill walking with 0%, 15%, and 30% BWS in 18 patients with chronic hemiparesis and found greater symmetry of weight-bearing during treadmill walking irrespective of the extent of BWS. They also observed reduction in both out-of-phase plantar-flexor activity and antigravity muscle activity with increasing percentages of BWS. Researchers from the same laboratory recommended, in an earlier study,88 that an upper limit of 30% BWS should be used to facilitate the gait of people with hemiparesis in order to avoid undesirable reductions in activation of antigravity lower-extremity muscles. The EMG amplitude of the lower-extremity muscles during BWS-facilitated locomotion has been shown to be closely associated with peak limb load.61 Hassid et al89 found that limb loading of patients post-stroke while stepping was optimized with 15% BWS, intimating that unweighting of 15% of body mass provides the most effective step-related sensory feedback to the locomotor neural networks.
In the only published randomized trial of BWS-treadmill training, Visintin and colleagues90 investigated recovery of gait of 100 patients post-stroke. They found greater improvements in locomotor ability (ie, balance, walking, speed, endurance) in the BWS group than in the full weight-bearing group after 6 weeks of gait training and at a 3-month follow-up evaluation. For the BWS group, the amount of support was progressively reduced from an initial level of 40% BWS.
Evidence to support clinical strategies that appear to exploit locomotor CPGs is accumulating. Use of these approaches, however, cannot be fully justified until further randomized controlled trials have been conducted and the physiologic mechanisms underlying the observed improvements have been explored. Rossignol and Barbeau caution investigators: "Given the hopes generated, it is important to ... be critical and conservative in the interpretation of results."91(p556) Unlike the situation with animals, convincing evidence that the spinal cord contains all the neural machinery needed to generate locomotion in humans with complete spinal cord transection is lacking. What remains unclear regarding improvements in mobility and EMG activity induced by supported treadmill training is the relative contribution of plastic changes in preserved pathways versus changes in the neural circuitry of spinal CPGs. It also could be argued that part of the training effect is due to strengthening of the lower-extremity muscles, although little evidence of a strengthening effect has been reported.8284
| Future Directions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Better understanding of locomotor CPGs is of practical importance. Locomotor CPGs may be manipulated pharmacologically or surgically to improve the quality of movement, and thus quality of life, for people with movement dysfunction. Although complete motor recovery following neurologic injury may never be realized, recent studies provide evidence, albeit limited, that guarded optimism in this domain is justified.8083,86,90 There is reason to believe that pharmacotherapy in combination with a supported walking protocol and electrical stimulation of sensory afferents may lead to more effective activation of spinal CPGs. Neural transplantation within the spinal cord holds promise of more optimal motor function. Encouraging interactive strategies include the use of transplanted tissue and neurotrophic factors to enhance neuronal survival and promote growth and the triad of transplantation, trophic factors, and a gait retraining program.
Existing and developing knowledge of CPG function may also lead to opportunities in the area of technology transfer. Biorobotics, a promising area of research bridging biology and robotics, has informed and has been informed by CPG research. Beer et al93 cited several recent advances, including 6-legged robots modeled after cockroach locomotion and humanoid robots capable of bipedal locomotion.
| Concluding Remarks |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|