Literature DB >> 23045348

Beyond muscular effects: depression of spinal recurrent inhibition after botulinum neurotoxin A.

Véronique Marchand-Pauvert1, Claire Aymard, Louis-Solal Giboin, Federica Dominici, Alessandro Rossi, Riccardo Mazzocchio.   

Abstract

The natural target of the botulinum neurototoxin type A (BoNT-A) is the neuromuscular junction. When injected into a muscle, BoNT-A is internalized by motoneurone terminals where it functions as an endopeptidase, cleaving protein components of the synaptic machinery responsible for vesicle docking and exocytosis. As a result, BoNT-A induces a characteristic flaccid paralysis of the affected muscle. In animal models, BoNT-A applied in the periphery can also influence central activity via retrograde transport and transcytosis. An analogous direct central effect in humans is still debated. The present study was designed to address whether BoNT-A modifies the activity of the spinal recurrent inhibitory pathways, when injected at muscular level, in humans. To avoid methodological bias, the recurrent inhibition from an injected muscle (soleus) was investigated on an untreated muscle (quadriceps), and stimulation parameters (producing recurrent inhibition) were monitored on a third non-injected muscle but innervated by the same nerve as the soleus (flexor digitorum brevis). The experiments were performed on 14 post-stroke patients exhibiting spasticity in ankle plantarflexors, candidates for BoNT-A. One month after BoNT-A, the level of recurrent inhibition was depressed. It is suggested that the depression of recurrent inhibition was induced by BoNT-A, injected peripherally, through axonal transport and blockade of the cholinergic synapse between motoneurone recurrent collaterals and Renshaw cells.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23045348      PMCID: PMC3591712          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2012.239178

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  65 in total

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2.  INHIBITORY CONVERGENCE UPON RENSHAW CELLS.

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6.  Pattern of heteronymous recurrent inhibition in the human lower limb.

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4.  Interneuronal Transfer and Distal Action of Tetanus Toxin and Botulinum Neurotoxins A and D in Central Neurons.

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8.  Muscle disuse caused by botulinum toxin injection leads to increased central gain of the stretch reflex in the rat.

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