Imaging Journal of Clinical and Medical Sciences

Clinical Image       Open Access      Peer-Reviewed

Exclusive Image Gallery on Human Spinal Cord Regeneration-Clinical Image-31

Giselher Schalow*

MD, PhD, Untere Kirchmatte 6, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland

Author and article information

*Corresponding author: Giselher Schalow, Professor, Untere Kirchmatte 6, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland, E-mail: [email protected]
Submitted: 22 May, 2019 | Accepted: 15 June, 2019 | Published: 16 June, 2019

Cite this as

Schalow G (2019) Exclusive Image Gallery on Human Spinal Cord Regeneration-Clinical Image-31. Imaging J Clin Medical Sci. 2019; 6(1): 031-031. Available from: 10.17352/2455-8702.000070

Copyright License

© 2019 Schalow G. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Evolution of the attractor layout of bladder functioning induced by learning transfer from movements to bladder functions upon CDT. The region around each local minimum of the potential landscape acts like a well that weekly traps the system into a coordinated state. Black balls correspond to stable minima of the potential. With learning, the pattern ‘spasticity of the external bladder sphincter’ vanishes and the patterns for bladder functioning (‘synergy’ and dyssynergia’) appear anew and gain their physiologic stability (physiologic deepness of each basin of attraction). The corresponding attractor layout for physiologic bladder functioning is given. Fluctuation of pattern state (the black ball) (C), and their decrease (F), due to the impairment of phase and frequency coordination of neuron firing, is pictured in ‘C’ and ‘F’ by long and short arrows. Dotted and dashed lines indicate the re-occurrence of bladder sensation. Note that more than two years of optimal continuous CDT were needed for bladder repair.

 

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.


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