Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.

The development of spinal hyper-reflexia as part of the spasticity syndrome represents one of the major complications associated with chronic spinal traumatic injury (SCI). The primary mechanism leading to progressive appearance of muscle spasticity is multimodal and may include loss of descending i...

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Main Authors: Jose A Corleto, Mariana Bravo-Hernández, Kota Kamizato, Osamu Kakinohana, Camila Santucci, Michael R Navarro, Oleksandr Platoshyn, Dasa Cizkova, Nadezda Lukacova, Julian Taylor, Martin Marsala
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4705098?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-30279f45710e4b0e9a5c214fd1b4e24b2020-11-25T01:44:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014464210.1371/journal.pone.0144642Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.Jose A CorletoMariana Bravo-HernándezKota KamizatoOsamu KakinohanaCamila SantucciMichael R NavarroOleksandr PlatoshynDasa CizkovaNadezda LukacovaJulian TaylorMartin MarsalaThe development of spinal hyper-reflexia as part of the spasticity syndrome represents one of the major complications associated with chronic spinal traumatic injury (SCI). The primary mechanism leading to progressive appearance of muscle spasticity is multimodal and may include loss of descending inhibitory tone, alteration of segmental interneuron-mediated inhibition and/or increased reflex activity to sensory input. Here, we characterized a chronic thoracic (Th 9) complete transection model of muscle spasticity in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Isoflurane-anesthetized rats received a Th9 laminectomy and the spinal cord was transected using a scalpel blade. After the transection the presence of muscle spasticity quantified as stretch and cutaneous hyper-reflexia was identified and quantified as time-dependent changes in: i) ankle-rotation-evoked peripheral muscle resistance (PMR) and corresponding electromyography (EMG) activity, ii) Hoffmann reflex, and iii) EMG responses in gastrocnemius muscle after paw tactile stimulation for up to 8 months after injury. To validate the clinical relevance of this model, the treatment potency after systemic treatment with the clinically established anti-spastic agents baclofen (GABAB receptor agonist), tizanidine (α2-adrenergic agonist) and NGX424 (AMPA receptor antagonist) was also tested. During the first 3 months post spinal transection, a progressive increase in ankle rotation-evoked muscle resistance, Hoffmann reflex amplitude and increased EMG responses to peripherally applied tactile stimuli were consistently measured. These changes, indicative of the spasticity syndrome, then remained relatively stable for up to 8 months post injury. Systemic treatment with baclofen, tizanidine and NGX424 led to a significant but transient suppression of spinal hyper-reflexia. These data demonstrate that a chronic Th9 spinal transection model in adult SD rat represents a reliable experimental platform to be used in studying the pathophysiology of chronic spinal injury-induced spasticity. In addition a consistent anti-spastic effect measured after treatment with clinically effective anti-spastic agents indicate that this model can effectively be used in screening new anti-spasticity compounds or procedures aimed at modulating chronic spinal trauma-associated muscle spasticity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4705098?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jose A Corleto
Mariana Bravo-Hernández
Kota Kamizato
Osamu Kakinohana
Camila Santucci
Michael R Navarro
Oleksandr Platoshyn
Dasa Cizkova
Nadezda Lukacova
Julian Taylor
Martin Marsala
spellingShingle Jose A Corleto
Mariana Bravo-Hernández
Kota Kamizato
Osamu Kakinohana
Camila Santucci
Michael R Navarro
Oleksandr Platoshyn
Dasa Cizkova
Nadezda Lukacova
Julian Taylor
Martin Marsala
Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jose A Corleto
Mariana Bravo-Hernández
Kota Kamizato
Osamu Kakinohana
Camila Santucci
Michael R Navarro
Oleksandr Platoshyn
Dasa Cizkova
Nadezda Lukacova
Julian Taylor
Martin Marsala
author_sort Jose A Corleto
title Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
title_short Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
title_full Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
title_fullStr Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
title_full_unstemmed Thoracic 9 Spinal Transection-Induced Model of Muscle Spasticity in the Rat: A Systematic Electrophysiological and Histopathological Characterization.
title_sort thoracic 9 spinal transection-induced model of muscle spasticity in the rat: a systematic electrophysiological and histopathological characterization.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The development of spinal hyper-reflexia as part of the spasticity syndrome represents one of the major complications associated with chronic spinal traumatic injury (SCI). The primary mechanism leading to progressive appearance of muscle spasticity is multimodal and may include loss of descending inhibitory tone, alteration of segmental interneuron-mediated inhibition and/or increased reflex activity to sensory input. Here, we characterized a chronic thoracic (Th 9) complete transection model of muscle spasticity in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Isoflurane-anesthetized rats received a Th9 laminectomy and the spinal cord was transected using a scalpel blade. After the transection the presence of muscle spasticity quantified as stretch and cutaneous hyper-reflexia was identified and quantified as time-dependent changes in: i) ankle-rotation-evoked peripheral muscle resistance (PMR) and corresponding electromyography (EMG) activity, ii) Hoffmann reflex, and iii) EMG responses in gastrocnemius muscle after paw tactile stimulation for up to 8 months after injury. To validate the clinical relevance of this model, the treatment potency after systemic treatment with the clinically established anti-spastic agents baclofen (GABAB receptor agonist), tizanidine (α2-adrenergic agonist) and NGX424 (AMPA receptor antagonist) was also tested. During the first 3 months post spinal transection, a progressive increase in ankle rotation-evoked muscle resistance, Hoffmann reflex amplitude and increased EMG responses to peripherally applied tactile stimuli were consistently measured. These changes, indicative of the spasticity syndrome, then remained relatively stable for up to 8 months post injury. Systemic treatment with baclofen, tizanidine and NGX424 led to a significant but transient suppression of spinal hyper-reflexia. These data demonstrate that a chronic Th9 spinal transection model in adult SD rat represents a reliable experimental platform to be used in studying the pathophysiology of chronic spinal injury-induced spasticity. In addition a consistent anti-spastic effect measured after treatment with clinically effective anti-spastic agents indicate that this model can effectively be used in screening new anti-spasticity compounds or procedures aimed at modulating chronic spinal trauma-associated muscle spasticity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4705098?pdf=render
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