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Increases in human motoneuron excitability after cervical spinal cord injury depend on the level of injury
Author(s) -
Christine K. Thomas,
Charlotte K. Häger,
Cliff S. Klein
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of neurophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.302
H-Index - 245
eISSN - 1522-1598
pISSN - 0022-3077
DOI - 10.1152/jn.00676.2016
Subject(s) - nerve conduction velocity , motor unit , axon , spinal cord injury , spinal cord , f wave , medicine , electrophysiology , neuroscience , anatomy , anesthesia , chemistry , psychology
After human spinal cord injury (SCI), motoneuron recruitment and firing rate during voluntary and involuntary contractions may be altered by changes in motoneuron excitability. Our aim was to compare F waves in single thenar motor units paralyzed by cervical SCI to those in uninjured controls because at the single-unit level F waves primarily reflect the intrinsic properties of the motoneuron and its initial segment. With intraneural motor axon stimulation, F waves were evident in all 4 participants with C 4 -level SCI, absent in 8 with C 5 or C 6 injury, and present in 6 of 12 Uninjured participants ( P < 0.001). The percentage of units that generated F waves differed across groups (C 4 : 30%, C 5 or C 6 : 0%, Uninjured: 16%; P < 0.001). Mean (±SD) proximal axon conduction velocity was slower after C 4 SCI [64 ± 4 m/s ( n = 6 units), Uninjured: 73 ± 8 m/s ( n = 7 units); P = 0.037]. Mean distal axon conduction velocity differed by group [C 4 : 40 ± 8 m/s ( n = 20 units), C 5 or C 6 : 49 ± 9 m/s ( n = 28), Uninjured: 60 ± 7 m/s ( n = 45); P < 0.001]. Motor unit properties (EMG amplitude, twitch force) only differed after SCI ( P ≤ 0.004), not by injury level. Motor units with F waves had distal conduction velocities, M-wave amplitudes, and twitch forces that spanned the respective group range, indicating that units with heterogeneous properties produced F waves. Recording unitary F waves has shown that thenar motoneurons closer to the SCI (C 5 or C 6 ) have reduced excitability whereas those further away (C 4 ) have increased excitability, which may exacerbate muscle spasms. This difference in motoneuron excitability may be related to the extent of membrane depolarization following SCI. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Unitary F waves were common in paralyzed thenar muscles of people who had a chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) at the C 4 level compared with uninjured people, but F waves did not occur in people that had SCI at the C 5 or C 6 level. These results highlight that intrinsic motoneuron excitability depends, in part, on how close the motoneurons are to the site of the spinal injury, which could alter the generation and strength of voluntary and involuntary muscle contractions.

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