| Literature DB >> 29768943 |
Anna-Sophia Wahl1,2,3, Eva Erlebach1,2, Biagio Brattoli4, Uta Büchler4, Julia Kaiser1,2, Benjamin V Ineichen1,2, Alice C Mosberger1,2, Shirin Schneeberger1,2, Stefan Imobersteg1,2, Martin Wieckhorst1,2, Martina Stirn5, Aileen Schroeter6, Bjoern Ommer4, Martin E Schwab1,2.
Abstract
The majority of stroke patients develop post-stroke fatigue, a symptom which impairs motivation and diminishes the success of rehabilitative interventions. We show that large cortical strokes acutely reduce activity levels in rats for 1-2 weeks as a physiological response paralleled by signs of systemic inflammation. Rats were exposed early (1-2 weeks) or late (3-4 weeks after stroke) to an individually monitored enriched environment to stimulate self-controlled high-intensity sensorimotor training. A group of animals received Anti-Nogo antibodies for the first two weeks after stroke, a neuronal growth promoting immunotherapy already in clinical trials. Early exposure to the enriched environment resulted in poor outcome: Training intensity was correlated to enhanced systemic inflammation and functional impairment. In contrast, animals starting intense sensorimotor training two weeks after stroke preceded by the immunotherapy revealed better recovery with functional outcome positively correlated to the training intensity and the extent of re-innervation of the stroke denervated cervical hemi-cord. Our results suggest stroke-induced fatigue as a biological purposeful reaction of the organism during neuronal remodeling, enabling new circuit formation which will then be stabilized or pruned in the subsequent rehabilitative training phase. However, intense training too early may lead to wrong connections and is thus less effective.Entities:
Keywords: Immune response; immunotherapy; neurorehabilitation; stroke; time windows
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29768943 PMCID: PMC6775586 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X18777661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200