| Literature DB >> 20519527 |
Juan Aguilar1, Desiré Humanes-Valera, Elena Alonso-Calviño, Josué G Yague, Karen A Moxon, Antonio Oliviero, Guglielmo Foffani.
Abstract
Spinal cord injury can produce extensive long-term reorganization of the cerebral cortex. Little is known, however, about the sequence of cortical events starting immediately after the lesion. Here we show that a complete thoracic transection of the spinal cord produces immediate functional reorganization in the primary somatosensory cortex of anesthetized rats. Besides the obvious loss of cortical responses to hindpaw stimuli (below the level of the lesion), cortical responses evoked by forepaw stimuli (above the level of the lesion) markedly increase. Importantly, these increased responses correlate with a slower and overall more silent cortical spontaneous activity, representing a switch to a network state of slow-wave activity similar to that observed during slow-wave sleep. The same immediate cortical changes are observed after reversible pharmacological block of spinal cord conduction, but not after sham. We conclude that the deafferentation due to spinal cord injury can immediately (within minutes) change the state of large cortical networks, and that this state change plays a critical role in the early cortical reorganization after spinal cord injury.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20519527 PMCID: PMC3842476 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0379-10.2010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167