IBRO Neuroscience Reports (Jun 2024)

Developing preclinical dog models for reconstructive severed spinal cord continuity via spinal cord fusion technique

  • Tingting Shen,
  • Weihua Zhang,
  • Rongyu Lan,
  • Zhihui Wang,
  • Jie Qin,
  • Jiayang Chen,
  • Jiaxing Wang,
  • Zhuotan Wu,
  • Yangyang Shen,
  • Qikai Lin,
  • Yudong Xu,
  • Yuan Chen,
  • Yi Wei,
  • Yiwen Liu,
  • Yuance Ning,
  • Haixuan Deng,
  • Zhenbin Cao,
  • Xiaoping Ren

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 560 – 566

Abstract

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Background: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a severe impairment of the central nervous system, leading to motor, sensory, and autonomic dysfunction. The present study investigates the efficacy of the polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated spinal cord fusion (SCF) techniques, demonstrating efficacious in various animal models with complete spinal cord transection at the T10 level. This research focuses on a comparative analysis of three SCF treatment models in beagles: spinal cord transection (SCT), vascular pedicle hemisected spinal cord transplantation (vSCT), and vascularized allograft spinal cord transplantation (vASCT) surgical model. Methods: Seven female beagles were included in the SCT surgical model, while four female dogs were enrolled in the vSCT surgical model. Additionally, twelve female dogs underwent vASCT in a paired donor-recipient setup. Three surgical model were evaluated and compared through electrophysiology, imaging and behavioral recovery. Results: The results showed a progressive recovery in the SCT, vSCT and vASCT surgical models, with no statistically significant differences observed in cBBB scores at both 2-month and 6-month post-operation (both P>0.05). Neuroimaging analysis across the SCT, vSCT and vASCT surgical models revealed spinal cord graft survival and fiber regrowth across transection sites at 6 months postoperatively. Also, positive MEP waveforms were recorded in all three surgical models at 6-month post-surgery. Conclusion: The study underscores the clinical relevance of PEG-mediated SCF techniques in promoting nerve fusion, repair, and motor functional recovery in SCI. SCT, vSCT, and vASCT, tailored to specific clinical characteristics, demonstrated similar effective therapeutic outcomes.

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