Reference : Effects of Schwann Cell Transplantation in a Contusion Model of Rat Spinal Cord Injury
Scientific journals : Article
Human health sciences : Surgery
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/7241
Effects of Schwann Cell Transplantation in a Contusion Model of Rat Spinal Cord Injury
English
Martin, Didier mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences cliniques > Neurochirurgie]
Robe, Pierre mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences biomédicales et précliniques > Génétique générale et humaine >]
Franzen, Rachelle mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences biomédicales et précliniques > Neuro-anatomie >]
Delree, P. [> > > >]
Schoenen, Jean mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences biomédicales et précliniques > Neuro-anatomie]
Stevenaert, Achille mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Services généraux (Faculté de médecine) > Relations académiques et scientifiques (Médecine) >]
Moonen, Gustave mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences cliniques > Neurologie - Doyen de la Faculté de Médecine]
1-Sep-1996
Journal of Neuroscience Research
Wiley Interscience
45
5
588-597
International
0360-4012
1097-4547
New York
NY
[en] Animals ; Axons/immunology/physiology ; Axons/immunology/physiology ; Female ; Ganglia, Spinal/cytology/transplantation ; Graft Survival ; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ; Nerve Regeneration/physiology ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Schwann Cells/transplantation ; Spinal Cord Injuries/pathology/therapy
[en] Cultured Schwann cells were transplanted at various delays into a spinal cord contusion injury performed at low thoracic level in adult female rats. The Schwann cells were purified from the dorsal root ganglia of adult syngeneic animals. the transplants were well tolerated, and the transplanted Schwann cells invaded the injured spinal cord. As quantified using video image analysis, the survival and growth of the transplanted cells were poor when the grafting procedure was performed 3-4 days after injury and very good when performed immediately or 10 days after injury, in which cases post-traumatic micro- and macrocavitation were strongly reduced. In animals grafted immediately after injury but not in animals grafted after 10 days, post-traumatic astrogliosis was much reduced. The Schwann cells transplanted area was invaded by numerous regenerating axons, the vast majority of which were, based on the neurotransmitter (CGRP and SP) profile, originating from dorsal root ganglion. No regeneration of the corticospinal tract as assessed after anterograde tracing or of descending aminergic fibers could be demonstrated.
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/7241
also: http://hdl.handle.net/2268/7253
10.1002/(SICI)1097-4547(19960901)45:5<588::AID-JNR8>3.0.CO;2-8

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