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Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord

Cellular mechanisms of secondary damage progression following spinal cord injury remain unclear. We have studied the extent of tissue damage from 15 min to 10 weeks after injury using morphological and biochemical estimates of lesion volume and surviving grey and white matter. This has been achieved...

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Autores principales: Ek, C. Joakim, Habgood, Mark D., Callaway, Jennifer K., Dennis, Ross, Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M., Johansson, Pia A., Potter, Ann, Wheaton, Benjamin, Saunders, Norman R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2918504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20711496
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012021
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author Ek, C. Joakim
Habgood, Mark D.
Callaway, Jennifer K.
Dennis, Ross
Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M.
Johansson, Pia A.
Potter, Ann
Wheaton, Benjamin
Saunders, Norman R.
author_facet Ek, C. Joakim
Habgood, Mark D.
Callaway, Jennifer K.
Dennis, Ross
Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M.
Johansson, Pia A.
Potter, Ann
Wheaton, Benjamin
Saunders, Norman R.
author_sort Ek, C. Joakim
collection PubMed
description Cellular mechanisms of secondary damage progression following spinal cord injury remain unclear. We have studied the extent of tissue damage from 15 min to 10 weeks after injury using morphological and biochemical estimates of lesion volume and surviving grey and white matter. This has been achieved by semi-quantitative immunocytochemical methods for a range of cellular markers, quantitative counts of white matter axonal profiles in semi-thin sections and semi-quantitative Western blot analysis, together with behavioural tests (BBB scores, ledged beam, random rung horizontal ladder and DigiGait™ analysis). We have developed a new computer-controlled electronic impactor based on a linear motor that allows specification of the precise nature, extent and timing of the impact. Initial (15 min) lesion volumes showed very low variance (1.92±0.23 mm(3), mean±SD, n = 5). Although substantial tissue clearance continued for weeks after injury, loss of grey matter was rapid and complete by 24 hours, whereas loss of white matter extended up to one week. No change was found between one and 10 weeks after injury for almost all morphological and biochemical estimates of lesion size or behavioural methods. These results suggest that previously reported apparent ongoing injury progression is likely to be due, to a large extent, to clearance of tissue damaged by the primary impact rather than continuing cell death. The low variance of the impactor and the comprehensive assessment methods described in this paper provide an improved basis on which the effects of potential treatment regimes for spinal cord injury can be assessed.
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spelling pubmed-29185042010-08-13 Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord Ek, C. Joakim Habgood, Mark D. Callaway, Jennifer K. Dennis, Ross Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M. Johansson, Pia A. Potter, Ann Wheaton, Benjamin Saunders, Norman R. PLoS One Research Article Cellular mechanisms of secondary damage progression following spinal cord injury remain unclear. We have studied the extent of tissue damage from 15 min to 10 weeks after injury using morphological and biochemical estimates of lesion volume and surviving grey and white matter. This has been achieved by semi-quantitative immunocytochemical methods for a range of cellular markers, quantitative counts of white matter axonal profiles in semi-thin sections and semi-quantitative Western blot analysis, together with behavioural tests (BBB scores, ledged beam, random rung horizontal ladder and DigiGait™ analysis). We have developed a new computer-controlled electronic impactor based on a linear motor that allows specification of the precise nature, extent and timing of the impact. Initial (15 min) lesion volumes showed very low variance (1.92±0.23 mm(3), mean±SD, n = 5). Although substantial tissue clearance continued for weeks after injury, loss of grey matter was rapid and complete by 24 hours, whereas loss of white matter extended up to one week. No change was found between one and 10 weeks after injury for almost all morphological and biochemical estimates of lesion size or behavioural methods. These results suggest that previously reported apparent ongoing injury progression is likely to be due, to a large extent, to clearance of tissue damaged by the primary impact rather than continuing cell death. The low variance of the impactor and the comprehensive assessment methods described in this paper provide an improved basis on which the effects of potential treatment regimes for spinal cord injury can be assessed. Public Library of Science 2010-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2918504/ /pubmed/20711496 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012021 Text en Ek et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ek, C. Joakim
Habgood, Mark D.
Callaway, Jennifer K.
Dennis, Ross
Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M.
Johansson, Pia A.
Potter, Ann
Wheaton, Benjamin
Saunders, Norman R.
Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title_full Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title_fullStr Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title_full_unstemmed Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title_short Spatio-Temporal Progression of Grey and White Matter Damage Following Contusion Injury in Rat Spinal Cord
title_sort spatio-temporal progression of grey and white matter damage following contusion injury in rat spinal cord
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2918504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20711496
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012021
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