TY - JOUR
T1 - Bilateral changes in afterhyperpolarization duration of spinal motoneurones in poststroke patients
AU - Kuraszkiewicz, Bożenna
AU - Chen, Jia Jin Jason
AU - Goszczyńska, Hanna
AU - Wang, Yu Lin
AU - Piotrkiewicz, Maria
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors received no specific funding for this work However, the experimental part of this study was performed in frames of the Personnel Exchange Program between the National Scientific Council, Taiwan, and Polish Academy of Sciences. The experiments for this study were performed in frames of the Personnel Exchange Program between the National Scientific Council, Taiwan, and Polish Academy of Sciences (research topic: Investigation of Peripheral Neuromuscular System Involvement in CNS lesions). The participation in acquisition and processing of experimental data by Michal Jakubiec, Lynn Liang, and Jolanta Mierzejewska is highly appreciated. Authors are also indebted to Janet Taylor for inspiring criticism and to Wojciech Zmysłowski for help with statistical analysis. Special thanks are due to Randy Powers for his suggestion to calculate SD in ISI bins instead of mean consecutive difference.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Kuraszkiewicz et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2018/1
Y1 - 2018/1
N2 - This paper extends the observations presented in the previously published work on the afterhyperpolarization (AHP) duration changes in motoneurones (MNs) on the paretic (more affected) side of 11 post-stroke patients by the same analysis on the non-paretic (less-affected) side. The estimated AHP duration for patients’ MNs supplying more-affected muscles was significantly longer than control values and the elongation decreased with patient age and disorder duration. For MNs supplying less-affected muscles, dependency of AHP duration on age was closer to the control data, but the scatter was substantially bigger. However, the AHP duration estimate of less-affected MNs tended to be longer than that of controls in the short time elapsed since the stroke, and shorter than controls in the long time. Our results thus suggest that the spinal MNs on both sides respond to the cerebral stroke rapidly with prolongation of AHP duration, which tends to normalize with time, in line with functional recovery. This suggestion is in concert with the published research on post-stroke changes in brain hemispheres. To our knowledge, these dependencies have never been investigated before. Since the number of our data was limited, the observed trends should be verified in a larger sample of patients and such a verification could take into account the suggestions for data analysis that we provide in this paper. Our data are in line with the earlier published research on MN firing characteristics post-stroke and support the conclusion that the MUs of the muscles at the non-paretic side are also affected and cannot be considered a suitable control for the MUs on the paretic side.
AB - This paper extends the observations presented in the previously published work on the afterhyperpolarization (AHP) duration changes in motoneurones (MNs) on the paretic (more affected) side of 11 post-stroke patients by the same analysis on the non-paretic (less-affected) side. The estimated AHP duration for patients’ MNs supplying more-affected muscles was significantly longer than control values and the elongation decreased with patient age and disorder duration. For MNs supplying less-affected muscles, dependency of AHP duration on age was closer to the control data, but the scatter was substantially bigger. However, the AHP duration estimate of less-affected MNs tended to be longer than that of controls in the short time elapsed since the stroke, and shorter than controls in the long time. Our results thus suggest that the spinal MNs on both sides respond to the cerebral stroke rapidly with prolongation of AHP duration, which tends to normalize with time, in line with functional recovery. This suggestion is in concert with the published research on post-stroke changes in brain hemispheres. To our knowledge, these dependencies have never been investigated before. Since the number of our data was limited, the observed trends should be verified in a larger sample of patients and such a verification could take into account the suggestions for data analysis that we provide in this paper. Our data are in line with the earlier published research on MN firing characteristics post-stroke and support the conclusion that the MUs of the muscles at the non-paretic side are also affected and cannot be considered a suitable control for the MUs on the paretic side.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0189845
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0189845
M3 - Article
C2 - 29338007
AN - SCOPUS:85040607273
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 13
JO - PloS one
JF - PloS one
IS - 1
M1 - e0189845
ER -