Subclinical respiratory dysfunction and impaired ventilatory adaptation in degenerative cervical myelopathy

Authors
Sweetman H, Rahman M, Vedantam A, Satkunendrarajah K.


Lab
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA

Journal
Exp Neurol.

Abstract
Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is a debilitating neurological condition characterized by chronic compression of the cervical spinal cord leading to impaired upper and lower limb function. Despite damage to areas of the cervical spinal cord that house the respiratory network, respiratory dysfunction is not a common symptom of DCM. However, DCM may be associated with respiratory dysfunction, and this can affect the ventilatory response to respiratory challenges during emergence from anesthesia, exercise, or pulmonary disease. Surgical spinal cord decompression, which is the primary treatment for DCM, leads to improved sensorimotor function in DCM; yet its impact on respiratory function is unknown. Here, using a clinically relevant model of DCM, we evaluate respiratory function during disease progression and assess adaptive ventilation to hypercapnic challenge before and after surgical intervention. We show that despite significant and progressive forelimb and locomotor deficits, there was no significant decline in eupneic ventilation from the early to late phases of spinal cord compression. Additionally, for the first time, we demonstrate that despite normal ventilation under resting conditions, DCM impairs acute adaptive ventilatory ability in response to hypercapnia. Remarkably, akin to DCM patients, surgical decompression treatment improved sensorimotor function in a subset of mice. In contrast, none of the mice that underwent surgical decompression recovered their ability to respond to hypercapnic ventilatory challenge. These findings underscore the impact of chronic spinal cord compression on respiratory function, highlighting the challenges associated with ventilatory response to respiratory challenges in individuals with DCM. This research highlights the impact of cervical spinal cord compression on respiratory dysfunction in DCM, as well as the persistence of adaptive ventilatory dysfunction after surgical spinal cord decompression. These results indicate the need for additional interventions to enhance recovery of respiratory function after surgery for DCM.

BIOSEB Instruments Used:
Grip strength test (BIO-GS4)

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