Literature DB >> 21612320

Impaired arpeggio movement in skilled reaching by rubrospinal tract lesions in the rat: a behavioral/anatomical fractionation.

Renée Morris1, Andrew P Tosolini, Joshua D Goldstein, Ian Q Whishaw.   

Abstract

Spinal cord injury damaging the rubrospinal tract (RST) interferes with skilled forelimb movement, but identification of the precise role of the RST in this behavior is impeded by the difficulty of surgically isolating the RST from other pathways running within the lateral funiculus (LF). The present study used a skilled reaching task and a behavioral/anatomical dissection method to identify the contribution of the RST to skilled forelimb movement. Rats were trained on the skilled reaching task and subjected to lesions of the LF. Based on histological evaluation, the animals were assigned to large, medium, or small LF lesion size groups. End point and arm/hand/digit movements were subsequently identified for each group. Success was impaired in all groups, but the impairment was not related to lesion size. Frame-by-frame qualitative analysis of the video recordings revealed that large LF lesions abolished the elements of digits close, digits open, arpeggio, grasp, supination 2, and release. Medium LF lesions interfered with a subset of the movement elements that were shown to be affected by the large LF lesions, namely arpeggio and grasp. Only the arpeggio movement was compromised after small LF lesions. The results show that not only does the LF contribute to skilled reaching, but because the RST was likely to have been damaged in all lesion groups, the RST is more involved in hand rotation than in digit use. The results are discussed in relation to the fiber tracts that are likely to be damaged in the different LF lesion groups.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21612320     DOI: 10.1089/neu.2010.1708

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurotrauma        ISSN: 0897-7151            Impact factor:   5.269


  18 in total

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4.  Spinal interneurons and forelimb plasticity after incomplete cervical spinal cord injury in adult rats.

Authors:  Elisa Janine Gonzalez-Rothi; Angela M Rombola; Celeste A Rousseau; Lynne M Mercier; Garrett M Fitzpatrick; Paul J Reier; David D Fuller; Michael A Lane
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2015-05-05       Impact factor: 5.269

5.  A Cervical Hemi-Contusion Spinal Cord Injury Model for the Investigation of Novel Therapeutics Targeting Proximal and Distal Forelimb Functional Recovery.

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7.  Phase-dependent deficits during reach-to-grasp after human spinal cord injury.

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8.  Compounds co-targeting kinases in axon regulatory pathways promote regeneration and behavioral recovery after spinal cord injury in mice.

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Review 9.  Corticospinal vs Rubrospinal Revisited: An Evolutionary Perspective for Sensorimotor Integration.

Authors:  Rafael Olivares-Moreno; Paola Rodriguez-Moreno; Veronica Lopez-Virgen; Martín Macías; Moisés Altamira-Camacho; Gerardo Rojas-Piloni
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10.  Targeting the full length of the motor end plate regions in the mouse forelimb increases the uptake of fluoro-gold into corresponding spinal cord motor neurons.

Authors:  Andrew Paul Tosolini; Rahul Mohan; Renée Morris
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2013-05-20       Impact factor: 4.003

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