Inducing peripheral sympathetic nerve activity by therapeutic electrical stimulation

Y Mikami, T Ogura, T Kubo
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan

Y Kira, S Aramaki
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kyoto Prefectural Rehabilitation Hospital for the Mentally and Physically Disabled, Kyoto, Japan

Purpose. To examine whether the activity of peripheral sympathetic nerves in animals with spinal cord injury can be controlled using therapeutic electrical stimulation.

Methods. The spinal cords of 6 Wistar rats were severed at T12/T13 disk level and were given continuous therapeutic electrical stimulation. Microneurography was used to record sympathetic nerve activity at 24, 48, and 72 hours after severing the spinal cord.

Results. Integrated values of muscle sympathetic nerve activity after 72 hours of therapeutic electrical stimulation revealed significantly larger potentials on the stimulated side than the non-stimulated side. Skin sympathetic nerve activity showed no difference between the 2 sides.

Conclusion. Therapeutic electrical stimulation was found to have a facilitatory effect on the muscle sympathetic nerve activity, whereas regulatory function was activated by the sympathetic nerves.

 
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery 2005;13(2):167-170
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Last update: 1 September 2005