Comparison of Single Bout Effects of Bicycle Training Versus Locomotor Training on Paired Reflex Depression of the Soleus H-Reflex After Motor Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury

Chetan P. Phadke, Sheryl M. Flynn, Floyd J. Thompson, Andrea L. Behrman, Mark H. Trimble, Carl G. Kukulka
2009 Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation  
Phadke CP, Flynn SM, Thompson FJ, Behrman AL, Trimble MH, Kukulka CG. Comparison of single bout effects of bicycle training versus locomotor training on paired reflex depression of the soleus H-reflex after motor incomplete spinal cord injury. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2009; 90:1218-28. Objective: To examine paired reflex depression changes post 20-minute bout each of 2 training environments: stationary bicycle ergometer training (bicycle training) and treadmill with body weight support and manual
more » ... ssistance (locomotor training). Design: Pretest-posttest repeated-measures. Setting: Locomotor laboratory. Participants: Motor incomplete SCI (nϭ12; mean, 44Ϯ16y); noninjured subjects (nϭ11; mean, 30.8Ϯ8.3y). Intervention: All subjects received each type of training on 2 separate days. Main Outcome Measure: Paired reflex depression at different interstimulus intervals (10s, 1s, 500ms, 200ms, and 100ms) was measured before and after both types of training. Results: (1) Depression was significantly less post-SCI compared with noninjured subjects at all interstimulus intervals and (2) post-SCI at 100-millisecond interstimulus interval: reflex depression significantly increased postbicycle training in all SCI subjects and in the chronic and spastic subgroups (PϽ.05). Conclusions: Phase-dependent regulation of reflex excitability, essential to normal locomotion, coordinated by pre-and postsynaptic inhibitory processes (convergent action of descending and segmental inputs onto spinal circuits) is impaired post-SCI. Paired reflex depression provides a quantitative assay of inhibitory processes contributing to phase-dependent changes in reflex excitability. Because bicycle training normalized reflex depression, we propose that bicycling may have a potential role in walking rehabilitation, and future studies should examine the long-term effects on subclinical measures of reflex activity and its relationship to functional outcomes.
doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2009.01.022 pmid:19577036 fatcat:27hxq6wzd5aq5bmsbk4jglt6b4