Author:
Adewuyi Adenike A.,Hashemi Mahdis,Khanna Shreyaa,Berger Michael J.,Franz Colin K.
Abstract
ABSTRACTIntroductionThe health of infralesional lower motor neurons (LMNs) after a cervical spinal cord injury is frequently overlooked, despite its critical role in mediating effective clinical interventions for improving arm and hand function. Prior studies suggest high frequencies of infralesional lower motor abnormalities in muscles that are potential targets for nerve transfer surgery, a procedure that has the potential to restore upper limb function.MethodsIn this prospective, two-center cohort study, we used multipoint stimulation motor unit number estimation (MPS-MUNE) to evaluate the number of motor units in clinically relevant infralesional muscles, including the predominantly C7-innervated anconeus and the predominantly C8-innervated extensor indicis (EI) in 15 individuals with cervical spinal cord injury (26 limbs) and 17 healthy controls.ResultsBoth CMAP and MUNE values were significantly lower (p < 0.05) for those with cervical spinal cord injury (EI CMAP: 2.0 mV±1.57, EI MUNE: 33±30.5, Anconeus CMAP:2.7 mV±1.9, Anconeus MUNE: 39±50.6) versus controls (EI CMAP: 6.6mV±1.0, EI MUNE:137±33.9, Anconeus CMAP:6.6 mV±1.3, Anconeus MUNE: 146 ±42.3). The test-retest reliability as measured by intraclass correlation coefficient and confidence interval (CI) for the EI and anconeus were 0.84 (CI: 0.45-0.95) and 0.78 (CI: 0.36-0.93), respectively.DiscussionThis study shows significant loss of infralesional motor units after cervical spinal cord injury. We demonstrate the potential utility of MPS-MUNE for evaluating the health of LMNs. The LMN abnormalities observed underscore the significance of this approach to evaluating potential targets for nerve transfer surgery for the restoration of upper limb function.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory