The ability of the adult central nervous system to reorganize its circuits over time is the key to understand the functional improvement in subjects with spinal cord injury (SCI). Adaptive changes within spared neur...The ability of the adult central nervous system to reorganize its circuits over time is the key to understand the functional improvement in subjects with spinal cord injury (SCI). Adaptive changes within spared neuronal circuits may occur at cortical, brainstem, or spinal cord level, both above and below a spinal lesion (Bareyre et al., 2004). At each level the reorganization is a very dynamic process, and its degree is highly variable, depending on several factors, including the age of the subject when SCI has occurred and the rehabilitative therapy. The use of electrophysiological techniques to assess these functional changes in neural networks is of great interest, because invasive methodologies as employed in preclinical models can obviously not be used in clinical studies.展开更多
文摘The ability of the adult central nervous system to reorganize its circuits over time is the key to understand the functional improvement in subjects with spinal cord injury (SCI). Adaptive changes within spared neuronal circuits may occur at cortical, brainstem, or spinal cord level, both above and below a spinal lesion (Bareyre et al., 2004). At each level the reorganization is a very dynamic process, and its degree is highly variable, depending on several factors, including the age of the subject when SCI has occurred and the rehabilitative therapy. The use of electrophysiological techniques to assess these functional changes in neural networks is of great interest, because invasive methodologies as employed in preclinical models can obviously not be used in clinical studies.