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  4. Spatiotemporal neuromodulation therapies engaging muscle synergies improve motor control after spinal cord injury
 
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2016
Journal Article
Title

Spatiotemporal neuromodulation therapies engaging muscle synergies improve motor control after spinal cord injury

Abstract
Electrical neuromodulation of lumbar segments improves motor control after spinal cord injury in animal models and humans. However, the physiological principles underlying the effect of this intervention remain poorly understood, which has limited the therapeutic approach to continuous stimulation applied to restricted spinal cord locations. Here we developed stimulation protocols that reproduce the natural dynamics of motoneuron activation during locomotion. For this, we computed the spatiotemporal activation pattern of muscle synergies during locomotion in healthy rats. Computer simulations identified optimal electrode locations to target each synergy through the recruitment of proprioceptive feedback circuits. This framework steered the design of spatially selective spinal implants and real-time control software that modulate extensor and flexor synergies with precise temporal resolution. Spatiotemporal neuromodulation therapies improved gait quality, weight-bearing capacity, endurance and skilled locomotion in several rodent models of spinal cord injury. These new concepts are directly translatable to strategies to improve motor control in humans.
Author(s)
Wenger, N.
Moraud, E.M.
Gandar, J.
Musienko, P.
Capogrosso, M.
Baud, L.
Goff, C.G. le
Barraud, Q.
Pavlova, N.
Dominici, N.
Minev, I.R.
Asboth, L.
Hirsch, A.
Duis, S.
Kreider, J.
Mortera, A.
Haverbeck, O.
Kraus, S.
Schmitz, F.
DiGiovanna, J.
Brand, R. van den
Bloch, J.
Detemple, P.
Lacour, S.P.
Bezard, E.
Micera, S.
Courtine, G.
Journal
Nature Medicine  
Project(s)
NEUWalk  
WALK AGAIN
Funder
European Commission EC  
European Commission EC  
Open Access
DOI
10.1038/nm.4025
Language
English
ICT-IMM  
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