| Literature DB >> 1436529 |
J M Shefner1, S A Berman, M Sarkarati, R R Young.
Abstract
Mechanisms underlying the development of spasticity after spinal cord injury are not understood. One spinal interneuron likely to be affected is the Renshaw cell, which acts to produce recurrent inhibition in motor neurons as well as inhibiting Ia interneurons. Descending pathways exert both excitatory and inhibitory control over Renshaw cell activity. We studied Renshaw cell activity in normal subjects and in patients with varying levels of spasticity after spinal cord injury using the conditioned H-reflex technique of Pierrot-Deseilligny and Bussel. A submaximal stimulus to the tibial nerve is presented prior to a supramaximal stimulus so that action potential collision permits an H reflex (H') to be elicited in response to the supramaximal stimulus. The amplitude of this H' reflex is affected by activity in recurrent inhibitory pathways. Patients with both complete and partial spinal cord lesions were studied; date of injury ranged from 1 month to 216 months prior to evaluation. In the 18 patients in whom H reflexes could be recorded, H' reflexes were absent in 13, in contrast to their uniform presence in normal subjects. We conclude that recurrent inhibition via Renshaw cell activity is increased in spinal cord injury, and that measures of recurrent inhibition may correlate well with some clinical measures of spasticity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1436529 DOI: 10.1212/wnl.42.11.2162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurology ISSN: 0028-3878 Impact factor: 9.910