Asynchronous therapy restores motor control by rewiring of the rat corticospinal tract after stroke

AS Wahl, W Omlor, JC Rubio, JL Chen, H Zheng… - Science, 2014 - science.org
AS Wahl, W Omlor, JC Rubio, JL Chen, H Zheng, A Schröter, M Gullo, O Weinmann…
Science, 2014science.org
The brain exhibits limited capacity for spontaneous restoration of lost motor functions after
stroke. Rehabilitation is the prevailing clinical approach to augment functional recovery, but
the scientific basis is poorly understood. Here, we show nearly full recovery of skilled
forelimb functions in rats with large strokes when a growth-promoting immunotherapy
against a neurite growth–inhibitory protein was applied to boost the sprouting of new fibers,
before stabilizing the newly formed circuits by intensive training. In contrast, early high …
The brain exhibits limited capacity for spontaneous restoration of lost motor functions after stroke. Rehabilitation is the prevailing clinical approach to augment functional recovery, but the scientific basis is poorly understood. Here, we show nearly full recovery of skilled forelimb functions in rats with large strokes when a growth-promoting immunotherapy against a neurite growth–inhibitory protein was applied to boost the sprouting of new fibers, before stabilizing the newly formed circuits by intensive training. In contrast, early high-intensity training during the growth phase destroyed the effect and led to aberrant fiber patterns. Pharmacogenetic experiments identified a subset of corticospinal fibers originating in the intact half of the forebrain, side-switching in the spinal cord to newly innervate the impaired limb and restore skilled motor function.
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