Effects of Intrathecal α1- and α2-Noradrenergic Agonists and Norepinephrine on Locomotion in Chronic Spinal Cats
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 79 (6) , 2941-2963
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1998.79.6.2941
Abstract
Chau, Connie, Hugues Barbeau, and Serge Rossignol. Effects of intrathecal α1- and α2-noradrenergic agonists and norepinephrine on locomotion in chronic spinal cats. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 2941–2963, 1998. Noradrenergic drugs, acting on α adrenoceptors, have been found to play an important role in the initiation and modulation of locomotor pattern in adult cats after spinal cord transection. There are at least two subtypes of α adrenoceptors, α1 and α2 adrenoceptors. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of selective α1 and α2 agonists in the initiation and modulation of locomotion in adult chronic cats in the early and late stages after complete transection at T13. Five cats, chronically implanted with an intrathecal cannula and electromyographic (EMG) electrodes were used in this study. Noradrenergic drugs including α2 agonists (clonidine, tizanidine, and oxymetazoline) and an antagonist, yohimbine, one α1 agonist (methoxamine), and a blocker, prazosin, as well as norepinephrine were injected intrathecally. EMG activity synchronized to video images of the hindlimbs were recorded before and after each drug injection. The results show differential effects of α1 and α2 agonists in the initiation of locomotion in early spinal cats (i.e., in the first week or so when there is no spontaneous locomotion) and in the modulation of locomotion and cutaneous reflexes in the late-spinal cats (i.e., when cats have recovered spontaneous locomotion). In early spinal cats, all three α2 agonists were found to initiate locomotion, although their action had a different time course. The α1 agonist methoxamine induced bouts of nice locomotor activity in three spinal cats some hours after injection but only induced sustained locomotion in one cat in which the effects were blocked by the α1 antagonist prazosin. In late spinal cats, although α2 agonists markedly increased the cycle duration and flexor muscle burst duration and decreased the weight support or extensor activity (effects blocked by an α2 antagonist, yohimbine), α1 agonist increased the weight support and primarily the extensor activity of the hindlimbs without markedly changing the timing of the step cycle. Although α2 agonists, especially clonidine, markedly reduced the cutaneous excitability and augmented the foot drag, the α1 agonist was found to increase the cutaneous reflex excitability. This is in line with previously reported differential effects of activation of the two receptors on motoneuron excitability and reflex transmission. Noradrenaline, the neurotransmitter itself, increased the cycle duration and at the same time retained the cutaneous excitability, thus exerting both α1 and α2 effects. This work therefore suggests that different subclasses of noradrenergic drugs could be used to more specifically target aspects of locomotor deficits in patients after spinal injury or diseases.Keywords
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