Litcius/Paper detail

Motor rehabilitation as a therapeutic tool for spinal cord injury: New perspectives in immunomodulation

Ciara Walsh, Khadija Gull, Dearbhaile Dooley

2022Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating condition that significantly impacts motor, sensory and autonomic function in patients. Despite advances in therapeutic approaches, there is still no curative therapy currently available. Neuroinflammation is a persisting event of the secondary injury phase of SCI that affects functional recovery, and modulation of the inflammatory response towards a beneficial anti-inflammatory state can improve recovery in preclinical SCI models. In human SCI patients, rehabilitative exercise, or motor rehabilitation as we will refer to it from here on out, remains the cornerstone of treatment to increase functional capacity and prevent secondary health implications. Motor rehabilitation is known to have anti-inflammatory effects; however, current literature is lacking in the description of the effect of motor rehabilitation on inflammation in the context of SCI. Understanding the effect on different inflammatory markers after SCI should enable the optimization of motor rehabilitation as a therapeutic regime. This review extensively describes the effect of motor rehabilitation on selected inflammatory mediators in both preclinical and human SCI studies. Additionally, we summarize how the type, duration, and intensity of motor rehabilitation can affect the inflammatory response after SCI. In doing so, we introduce a new perspective on how motor rehabilitation can be optimized as an immunomodulatory therapy to improve patient outcome after SCI.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRehabilitationSpinal cord injuryPhysical medicine and rehabilitationContext (archaeology)NeuroinflammationTherapeutic approachNeurosciencePhysical therapySpinal cordInflammationPsychologyDiseasePathologyImmunologyBiologyPaleontologyPsychiatrySpinal Cord Injury ResearchStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryExercise and Physiological Responses