AI Article Synopsis

  • Ventral root avulsion (VRA) leads to significant neuron degeneration and inflammation after motor roots are severed from the spinal cord, prompting the need for effective treatment strategies.
  • Treatment with dimethyl fumarate (DMF), combined with a biological glue (fibrin sealant), shows promise in preserving motoneurons and synapses while reducing inflammation, thereby improving neuron survival.
  • The combined approach of DMF treatment and root reimplantation results in significant motor function recovery in rats, demonstrating the potential benefits of multimodal regenerative therapies after spinal cord injury.

Article Abstract

Background: Ventral root avulsion (VRA) is an experimental approach in which there is an abrupt separation of the motor roots from the surface of the spinal cord. As a result, most of the axotomized motoneurons degenerate by the second week after injury, and the significant loss of synapses and increased glial reaction triggers a chronic inflammatory state. Pharmacological treatment associated with root reimplantation is thought to overcome the degenerative effects of VRA. Therefore, treatment with dimethyl fumarate (DMF), a drug with neuroprotective and immunomodulatory effects, in combination with a heterologous fibrin sealant/biopolymer (FS), a biological glue, may improve the regenerative response.

Methods: Adult female Lewis rats were subjected to VRA of L4-L6 roots followed by reimplantation and daily treatment with DMF for four weeks. Survival times were evaluated 1, 4 or 12 weeks after surgery. Neuronal survival assessed by Nissl staining, glial reactivity (anti-GFAP for astrocytes and anti-Iba-1 for microglia) and synapse preservation (anti-VGLUT1 for glutamatergic inputs and anti-GAD65 for GABAergic inputs) evaluated by immunofluorescence, gene expression (pro- and anti-inflammatory molecules) and motor function recovery were measured.

Results: Treatment with DMF at a dose of 15 mg/kg was found to be neuroprotective and immunomodulatory because it preserved motoneurons and synapses and decreased astrogliosis and microglial reactions, as well as downregulated the expression of pro-inflammatory gene transcripts.

Conclusion: The pharmacological benefit was further enhanced when associated with root reimplantation with FS, in which animals recovered at least 50% of motor function, showing the efficacy of employing multiple regenerative approaches following spinal cord root injury.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7250131PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-9199-JVATITD-2019-0093DOI Listing

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