視床下部を刺激すると麻痺患者の歩行が回復する(Stimulating hypothalamus restores walking in paralyzed patients)

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2024-12-02 スイス連邦工科大学ローザンヌ校(EPFL)

スイス連邦工科大学ローザンヌ校(EPFL)の研究チームは、視床下部の特定部位を電気刺激することで、脊髄損傷により麻痺したモデル動物の歩行能力を回復させることに成功しました。視床下部は本能的行動や動機づけに関与する脳領域であり、今回の研究では、この部位の刺激が脊髄の神経回路を活性化し、歩行運動を再び可能にすることが示されました。この発見は、脊髄損傷患者のリハビリテーションに新たなアプローチを提供する可能性があり、将来的には人間への応用も期待されています。

<関連情報>

視床下部深部脳刺激により脊髄損傷後の歩行が増強される Hypothalamic deep brain stimulation augments walking after spinal cord injury

Newton Cho,Jordan W. Squair,Viviana Aureli,Nicholas D. James,Léa Bole-Feysot,Inssia Dewany,Nicolas Hankov,Laetitia Baud,Anna Leonhartsberger,Kristina Sveistyte,Michael A. Skinnider,Matthieu Gautier,Achilleas Laskaratos,Katia Galan,Maged Goubran,Jimmy Ravier,Frederic Merlos,Laura Batti,Stéphane Pages,Nadia Berard,Nadine Intering,Camille Varescon,Anne Watrin,Léa Duguet,… Grégoire Courtine
Nature Medicine  Published:02 December 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03306-x

視床下部を刺激すると麻痺患者の歩行が回復する(Stimulating hypothalamus restores walking in paralyzed patients)

Abstract

A spinal cord injury (SCI) disrupts the neuronal projections from the brain to the region of the spinal cord that produces walking, leading to various degrees of paralysis. Here, we aimed to identify brain regions that steer the recovery of walking after incomplete SCI and that could be targeted to augment this recovery. To uncover these regions, we constructed a space–time brain-wide atlas of transcriptionally active and spinal cord-projecting neurons underlying the recovery of walking after incomplete SCI. Unexpectedly, interrogation of this atlas nominated the lateral hypothalamus (LH). We demonstrate that glutamatergic neurons located in the LH (LHVglut2) contribute to the recovery of walking after incomplete SCI and that augmenting their activity improves walking. We translated this discovery into a deep brain stimulation therapy of the LH (DBSLH) that immediately augmented walking in mice and rats with SCI and durably increased recovery through the reorganization of residual lumbar-terminating projections from brainstem neurons. A pilot clinical study showed that DBSLH immediately improved walking in two participants with incomplete SCI and, in conjunction with rehabilitation, mediated functional recovery that persisted when DBSLH was turned off. There were no serious adverse events related to DBSLH. These results highlight the potential of targeting specific brain regions to maximize the engagement of spinal cord-projecting neurons in the recovery of neurological functions after SCI. Further trials must establish the safety and efficacy profile of DBSLH, including potential changes in body weight, psychological status, hormonal profiles and autonomic functions.

旅への誘い教育医療・健康生物工学一般
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