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Search: WFRF:(Kaczmarek Dominik)

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1.
  • Jankowska, Elzbieta, et al. (author)
  • Evidence that some long-lasting effects of direct current in the rat spinal cord are activity-independent
  • 2016
  • In: European Journal of Neuroscience. - : Wiley. - 0953-816X. ; 43:10, s. 1400-1411
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The effects of trans-spinal direct current (DC) stimulation (tsDCS) on specific neuronal populations are difficult to elucidate, as it affects a variety of neuronal networks. However, facilitatory and depressive effects on neurons processing information from the skin and from muscles can be evaluated separately when weak (0.2-0.3 mu A) DC is applied within restricted areas of the rat spinal cord. The effects of such local DC application were recently demonstrated to persist for at least 1 h, and to include changes in the excitability of afferent fibres and their synaptic actions. However, whether these effects require activation of afferent fibres in spinal neuronal pathways during DC application, i.e. whether they are activity-dependent or activity-independent, remained an open question. The aim of the present study was to address this question by analysing the effects of local DC application on monosynaptic actions of muscle and skin afferents (extracellular field potentials) and afferent fibre excitability. The results revealed that long-lasting post-polarization changes evoked without concomitant activation of afferent fibres replicate changes evoked by stimuli applied during, before and after polarization. The study leads to the conclusion that the reported effects are activity-independent. As this conclusion applies to the local effects of DC application in at least two spinal pathways and to the effects of both cathodal and anodal polarization, it indicates that some of the more widespread effects of trans-spinal and transcranial stimulation (both tsDCS and transcranial DC stimulation) may be activity-independent. The results may therefore contribute to the design of more specific DC applications in clinical practice.
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2.
  • Jankowska, Elzbieta, et al. (author)
  • Long-lasting increase in axonal excitability after epidurally applied DC
  • 2017
  • In: Journal of Neurophysiology. - : American Physiological Society. - 0022-3077 .- 1522-1598. ; 118:2, s. 1210-1220
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Effects of direct current (DC) on nerve fibers have primarily been investigated during or just after DC application. However, locally applied cathodal DC was recently demonstrated to increase the excitability of intraspinal preterminal axonal branches for >1 h. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate whether DC evokes a similarly long-lasting increase in the excitability of myelinated axons within the dorsal columns. The excitability of dorsal column fibers stimulated epidurally was monitored by recording compound action potentials in peripheral nerves in acute experiments in deeply anesthetized rats. The results show that 1) cathodal polarization (0.8–1.0 μA) results in a severalfold increase in the number of epidurally activated fibers and 2) the increase in the excitability appears within seconds, 3) lasts for >1 h, and 4) is activity independent, as it does not require fiber stimulation during the polarization. These features demonstrate an unexplored form of plasticity of myelinated fibers and indicate the conditions under which it develops. They also suggest that therapeutic effects of epidural stimulation may be significantly enhanced if it is combined with DC polarization. In particular, by using DC to increase the number of fibers activated by low-intensity epidural stimuli, the low clinical tolerance to higher stimulus intensities might be overcome. The activity independence of long-lasting DC effects would also allow the use of only brief periods of DC polarization preceding epidural stimulation to increase the effect. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The study indicates a new form of plasticity of myelinated fibers. The differences in time course of DC-evoked increases in the excitability of myelinated nerve fibers in the dorsal columns and in preterminal axonal branches suggest that distinct mechanisms are involved in them. The results show that combining epidural stimulation and transspinal DC polarization may dramatically improve their outcome and result in more effective pain control and the return of impaired motor functions. © 2017 the American Physiological Society.
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3.
  • Jankowska, Elzbieta, et al. (author)
  • Long-term modulation of the axonal refractory period.
  • 2022
  • In: The European journal of neuroscience. - : Wiley. - 1460-9568 .- 0953-816X. ; 56:7, s. 4983-4999
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The main question addressed in this study was whether the refractoriness of nerve fibres can be modulated by their depolarisation and, if so, whether depolarisation of nerve fibres evokes a long-term decrease in the duration of the refractory period as well as the previously demonstrated increase in their excitability. This was investigated on nerve fibres within the dorsal columns, dorsal roots and peripheral nerves in deeply anaesthetised rats in vivo. The results revealed major differences depending on the sites of fibre stimulation and polarisation. Firstly, the relative refractory period was found to be shorter in epidurally stimulated dorsal column fibres than in fibres stimulated at other sites. Secondly, the minimal effective interstimulus intervals reflecting the absolute refractory period were likewise shorter for nerve fibres within the dorsal columns even though action potentials evoked by the second of a pair of stimuli were similarly delayed with respect to the preceding action potentials at all the stimulation sites. Thirdly, the minimal interstimulus intervals were reduced by epidurally applied cathodal direct current polarisation but not at other stimulation sites. Consequently, higher proportions of dorsal column fibres could be excited at higher frequencies, especially following their depolarisation, at interstimulus intervals as short as 0.5-0.7ms. The results demonstrate that epidural depolarisation results in long-lasting effects not only on the excitability but also on the refractoriness of dorsal column fibres. They also provide further evidence for specific features of afferent fibres traversing the dorsal columns previously linked to properties of their branching regions.
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4.
  • Kaczmarek, Dominik, et al. (author)
  • DC-Evoked Modulation of Excitability of Myelinated Nerve Fibers and Their Terminal Branches; Differences in Sustained Effects of DC
  • 2018
  • In: Neuroscience. - : Elsevier BV. - 0306-4522 .- 1873-7544. ; 374, s. 236-249
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • © 2018 IBRO Direct current (DC) evokes long-lasting changes in neuronal networks both presynaptically and postsynaptically and different mechanisms were proposed to be involved in them. Different mechanisms were also suggested to account for the different dynamics of presynaptic DC actions on myelinated nerve fibers stimulated before they entered the spinal gray matter and on their terminal branches. The aim of the present study was to examine whether these different dynamics might be related to differences in the involvement of K+ channels. To this end, we compared effects of the K+ channel blocker 4-amino-pyridine (4-AP) on DC-evoked changes in the excitability of afferent fibers stimulated within the dorsal columns (epidurally) and within their projection areas in the dorsal horn and motor nuclei (intraspinally). 4-AP was applied systemically in deeply anesthetized rats. DC-evoked increases in the excitability of epidurally stimulated afferent nerve fibers, and increases in field potentials evoked by these fibers, were not affected by 4-AP. In contrast, sustained decreases rather than increases in the excitability of intraspinally stimulated terminal nerve branches were evoked by local application of DC in conjunction with 4-AP. The study leads to the conclusion that 4-AP-sensitive K+ channels contribute to the sustained DC-evoked post-polarization increases in the excitability at the level of terminal branches of nerve fibers but not of the nodes of Ranvier nor within the juxta-paranodal regions where other mechanisms would be involved in inducing the sustained DC-evoked changes.
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5.
  • Kaczmarek, Dominik, et al. (author)
  • Do long-lasting effects of epidural polarization of afferent fibres depend on persistent sodium current?
  • 2023
  • In: European Journal of Neuroscience. - : Wiley. - 0953-816X .- 1460-9568.
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Few attempts have so far been made to define the mechanisms underlying the hour-long effects of trans-spinal stimulation combined with epidural polarization. In the present study, we investigated the potential involvement of non-inactivating sodium channels in afferent fibres. To this end, riluzole, a blocker of these channels, was administered locally to the dorsal columns close to the site of the excitation of afferent nerve fibres by epidural stimulation in deeply anaesthetized rats in vivo. Riluzole did not prevent the induction of the polarization-evoked sustained increase in the excitability of dorsal column fibres but tended to weaken it. It likewise weakened but did not abolish the sustained polarization-evoked shortening of the refractory period of these fibres. These results lead to the conclusion that the persistent sodium current may contribute to the sustained post-polarization-evoked effects but is only partly involved in both the induction and the expression of these effects.
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6.
  • Kaczmarek, Dominik, et al. (author)
  • Does trans-spinal and local DC polarization affect presynaptic inhibition and post-activation depression?
  • 2017
  • In: Journal of Physiology. - 0022-3751. ; 595:5, s. 1743-1761
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Direct current (DC) polarization has been demonstrated to alleviate the effects of various deficits in the operation of the central nervous system. However, the effects of trans-spinal DC stimulation (tsDCS) have been investigated less extensively than the effects of transcranial DC stimulation, and their cellular mechanisms have not been elucidated. The main objectives of this study were, therefore, to extend our previous analysis of DC effects on the excitability of primary afferents and synaptic transmission by examining the effects of DC on two spinal modulatory feedback systems, presynaptic inhibition and post-activation depression, in an anaesthetized rat preparation. Other objectives were to compare the effects of locally and trans-spinally applied DC(locDC and tsDCS). Local polarization at the sites of terminal branching of afferent fibres was found to induce polarity-dependent actions on presynaptic inhibition and post-activation depression, as cathodal locDC enhanced them and anodal locDC depressed them. In contrast, tsDCS modulated presynaptic inhibition and post-activation depression in a polarity-independent fashion because both cathodal and anodal tsDCS facilitated them. The results show that the local presynaptic actions of DC might counteract both excessively strong and excessively weak monosynaptic actions of group Ia and cutaneous afferents. However, they indicate that trans-spinally applied DC might counteract the exaggerated spinal reflexes but have an adverse effect on pathologically weakened spinal activity by additional presynaptic weakening. The results are also relevant for the analysis of the basic properties of presynaptic inhibition and post-activation depression because they indicate that some common DC-sensitive mechanisms contribute to them.
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