Effect of 6-Month Exercise Training on Neurovascular Function in Spinal Cord Injury

MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE(2021)

Cited 9|Views5
No score
Abstract
Introduction Although previous data show exacerbated incidence of cognitive impairment after spinal cord injury (SCI), the physiology that underlies this postinjury cognitive decline is unknown. One potential culprit is impairment in the ability of cerebral vasculature to alter regional flow to sustain neural metabolism (i.e., "neurovascular coupling"). We hypothesized that cerebrovascular responses to a working memory task are impaired in individuals with SCI and can be improved by aerobic exercise training. Methods We assessed the effect of injury and 6-month full-body aerobic exercise training on the cerebral blood flow response to cognitive demand (i.e., neurovascular coupling) in 24 individuals with SCI and 16 controls. Cognitive demand was introduced in a graded fashion using a working memory task. Results Reaction time tended to be higher in individuals with SCI, especially those with high-level (>= T4) injuries, possibly due to upper motor impairments. Neurovascular coupling was graded across task difficulty (P < 0.01) and followed cognitive demand, and injury itself did not have a significant effect (group effect P = 0.99, interaction P = 0.70). Individuals with low-level injuries (More
Translated text
Key words
CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW,EXERCISE,NEUROVASCULAR COUPLING,SPINAL CORD INJURY
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined