Causal link between the cortico-rubral pathway and functional recovery through forced impaired limb use in rats with stroke

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Abstract

Intensive rehabilitation is believed to induce use-dependent plasticity in the injured nervous system; however, its causal relationship to functional recovery is unclear. Here, we performed systematic analysis of the effects of forced use of an impaired forelimb on the recovery of rats after lesioning the internal capsule with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Forced limb use (FLU) group rats exhibited better recovery of skilled forelimb functions and their cortical motor area with forelimb representation was restored and enlarged on the ipsilesional side. In addition, abundant axonal sprouting from the reemerged forelimb area was found in the ipsilateral red nucleus after FLU. To test the causal relationship between the plasticity in the cortico-rubral pathway and recovery, loss-of-function experiments were conducted using a double-viral vector technique, which induces selective blockade of the target pathway. Blockade of the cortico-rubral tract resulted in deficits of the recovered forelimb function in FLU group rats. These findings suggest that the cortico-rubral pathway is a substrate for recovery induced by intensive rehabilitation after ICH.

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Ishida, A., Isa, K., Umeda, T., Kobayashi, K., Kobayashi, K., Hida, H., & Isa, T. (2016). Causal link between the cortico-rubral pathway and functional recovery through forced impaired limb use in rats with stroke. Journal of Neuroscience, 36(2), 455–467. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2399-15.2016

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