会议专题

Axonal remodeling in the corticospinal tract after stroke: how does rehabilitative training modulate it?

  Stroke causes long-term disability, and rehabilitative training is commonly used to improve the consecutive functional recovery.Following brain damage, surviving neurons undergo morphological alterations to reconstruct the remaining neural network.In the motor system, such neural network remodeling is observed as a motor map reorganization.Because of its significant correlation with functional recovery, motor map reorganization has been regarded as a key phenomenon for functional recovery after stroke.Although the mechanism underlying motor map reorganization remains unclear, increasing evidence has shown a critical role for axonal remodeling in the corticospinal tract.In this study, we review previous studies investigating axonal remodeling in the corticospinal tract after stroke and discuss which mechanisms may underlie the stimulatory effect of rehabilitative training.Axonal remodeling in the corticospinal tract can be classified into three types based on the location and the original targets of corticospinal neurons, and it seems that all the surviving corticospinal neurons in both ipsilesional and contralesional hemisphere can participate in axonal remodeling and motor map reorganization.Through axonal remodeling, corticospinal neurons alter their output selectivity from a single to multiple areas to compensate for the lost function.The remodeling of the corticospinal axon is influenced by the extent of tissue destruction and promoted by various therapeutic interventions, including rehabilitative training.Although the precise molecular mechanism underlying rehabilitation-promoted axonal remodeling remains elusive, previous data suggest that rehabilitative training promotes axonal remodeling by upregulating growth-promoting and downregulating growth-inhibiting signals.

stroke rehabilitative training axonal remodeling corticospinal tract motor map reorganization motor system neurotrophic factor functional compensation neural activity growth promoting signal growth inhibitory signal task-specific training

Naohiko Okabe Kazuhiko Narita Osamu Miyamoto

Second Department of Physiology, Kawasaki Medical School 577, Matsushima, Kurashiki City, Okayama, Japan

国际会议

Joint symposium of 2018 International Neural Regeneration Symposium、11th Asia Pacific Symposium on Neural Regeneration 、 2018 International Spinal Cord Injury Treatments and Trials Symposium 、2nd Annual Meeting of Neural Regeneration and Repair Committee(

广州

英文

76-83

2018-07-26(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)