Characterization of a graded cervical hemicontusion spinal cord injury model in adult male rats.

J Neurotrauma

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Center for Glial Biology in Medicine, University of Alabama-Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35249, USA.

Published: November 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Most spinal cord injury (SCI) experiments in rodents focus on the thoracic region, measuring hindlimb function, whereas clinical cases often happen in the cervical region, needing different models to reflect true recovery.
  • A new study developed a graded cervical hemicontusion SCI model in rats to assess forelimb functionality and histological measures after varying injury severities.
  • Results showed strong correlations between forelimb and locomotor function deficits with tissue damage, indicating that this model is effective for testing therapies aimed at recovery post-SCI.

Article Abstract

Most experimental models of spinal cord injury (SCI) in rodents induce damage in the thoracic cord and subsequently examine hindlimb function as an indicator of recovery. In these models, functional recovery is most attributable to white-matter preservation and is less influenced by grey-matter sparing. In contrast, most clinical cases of SCI occur at the lower cervical levels, a region in which both grey-matter and white-matter sparing contribute to functional motor recovery. Thus experimental cervical SCI models are beginning to be developed and used to assess protective and pharmacological interventions following SCI. The objective of this study was to characterize a model of graded cervical hemicontusion SCI with regard to several histological and behavioral outcome measures, including novel forelimb behavioral tasks. Using a commercially available rodent spinal cord impactor, adult male rats received hemicontusion SCI at vertebral level C5 at 100, 200, or 300 kdyn force, to produce mild, moderate, or severe injury severities. Tests of skilled and unskilled forelimb and locomotor function were employed to assess functional recovery, and spinal cord tissue was collected to assess lesion severity. Deficits in skilled and unskilled forelimb function and locomotion relating to injury severity were observed, as well as decreases in neuronal numbers, white-matter area, and white-matter gliosis. Significant correlations were observed between behavioral and histological data. Taken together, these data suggest that the forelimb functional and locomotor assessments employed here are sensitive enough to measure functional changes, and that this hemicontusion model can be used to evaluate potential protective and regenerative therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2978055PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2010.1424DOI Listing

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