Rat models of traumatic spinal cord injury to assess motor recovery

被引:96
|
作者
Onifer, Stephen M. [1 ,2 ]
Rabchevsky, Alexander G. [3 ]
Scheff, Stephen W. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kentucky, Spinal Cord & Brain Injuiry Res Ctr, Dept Anat & Neurobiol, Lexington, KY 40536 USA
[2] Univ Kentucky, Spinal Cord & Brain Injuiry Res Ctr, Dept Physiol, Lexington, KY 40536 USA
[3] Univ Kentucky, Sanders Brown Ctr Aging 101, Dept Anat & Neurobiol, Lexington, KY 40536 USA
关键词
compression; contusion; demyelination; excitotoxicity; free radicals; inflammation; ischemia; laceration;
D O I
10.1093/ilar.48.4.385
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
Devastating motor, sensory, and autonomic dysfunctions render long-term personal hardships to the survivors of traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). The suffering also extends to the survivors' families and friends, who endure emotional, physical, and financial burdens in providing for necessary surgeries, care, and rehabilitation. After the primary mechanical SCI, there is a complex secondary injury cascade that leads to the progressive death of otherwise potentially viable axons and cells and that impairs endogenous recovery processes. Investigations of possible cures and of ways to alleviate the hardships of traumatic SCI include those of interventions that attenuate or overcome the secondary injury cascade, enhance the endogenous repair mechanisms, regenerate axons, replace lost cells, and rehabilitate. These investigations have led to the creation of laboratory animal models of the different types of traumatic human SCI and components of the secondary injury cascade. However, no particular model completely addresses all aspects of traumatic SCI. In this article, we describe adult rat SCI models and the motor, and in some cases sensory and autonomic, deficits that each produces. Importantly, as researchers in this area move toward clinical trials to alleviate the hardships of traumatic SCI, there is a need for standardized small and large animal SCI models as well as quantitative behavioral and electrophysiological assessments of their outcomes so that investigators testing various interventions can directly compare their results and correlate them with the molecular, biochemical, and histological alterations.
引用
收藏
页码:385 / 395
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Neurophysiological characterization of motor recovery in acute spinal cord injury
    McKay, W. B.
    Ovechkin, A. V.
    Vitaz, T. W.
    de Paleville, D. G. L. Terson
    Harkema, S. J.
    SPINAL CORD, 2011, 49 (03) : 421 - 429
  • [22] Motor Evoked Potentials Predict Recovery in Spinal Cord Injury
    Dhall, Sanjay
    Readdy, William
    Manley, Geoffrey
    Bresnahan, Jacque
    Beattie, Michael
    Talbott, Jason
    Pan, Jonathan
    Whetstone, William
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 2015, 123 (02) : A541 - A541
  • [23] The Effect of Minocycline on Motor Neuron Recovery and Neuropathic Pain in a Rat Model of Spinal Cord Injury
    Cho, Dong Charn
    Cheong, Jin Hwan
    Yang, Moon Sul
    Hwang, Se Jin
    Kim, Jae Min
    Kim, Choong Hyun
    JOURNAL OF KOREAN NEUROSURGICAL SOCIETY, 2011, 49 (02) : 83 - 91
  • [24] Neurophysiological characterization of motor recovery in acute spinal cord injury
    W B McKay
    A V Ovechkin
    T W Vitaz
    D G L Terson de Paleville
    S J Harkema
    Spinal Cord, 2011, 49 : 421 - 429
  • [25] MOTOR SEGMENTAL RECOVERY IN SPINAL CORD INJURY - A BLESSING IN DISGUISE!
    Srivastava, R.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2011, 18 : 612 - 612
  • [26] Induction of traumatic brain and spinal cord injury models in rat using a modified impactor device
    Ghorbani, Meysam
    Shahabi, Parviz
    Ebrahimi-kalan, Abass
    Soltani-Zangbar, Hamid
    Mahmoudi, Javad
    Bani, Soheila
    Sadeghzadeh-Oskouei, Behnaz
    Rafiee-Byraami, Yusef
    Salimi, Omid
    PHYSIOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 22 (04): : 228 - 239
  • [27] Traumatic spinal cord injury
    Ahuja, Christopher S.
    Wilson, Jefferson R.
    Nori, Satoshi
    Kotter, Mark R. N.
    Druschel, Claudia
    Curt, Armin
    Fehlings, Michael G.
    NATURE REVIEWS DISEASE PRIMERS, 2017, 3
  • [28] ALLODYNIA FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC SPINAL-CORD INJURY IN THE RAT
    SIDDALL, P
    XU, CL
    COUSINS, M
    NEUROREPORT, 1995, 6 (09) : 1241 - 1244
  • [30] Traumatic spinal cord injury
    Kang, AH
    CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2005, 48 (01): : 67 - 72