z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Polyethylene glycol‐induced motor recovery after total spinal transection in rats
Author(s) -
Ren Shuai,
Liu ZeHan,
Wu Qiong,
Fu Kuang,
Wu Jun,
Hou LiTing,
Li Ming,
Zhao Xin,
Miao Qing,
Zhao YunLong,
Wang ShengYu,
Xue Yan,
Xue Zhen,
Guo YaShan,
Canavero Sergio,
Ren XiaoPing
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cns neuroscience and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.403
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 1755-5949
pISSN - 1755-5930
DOI - 10.1111/cns.12713
Subject(s) - medicine , vertebrectomy , spinal cord , somatosensory evoked potential , paralysis , anesthesia , spinal cord injury , saline , somatosensory system , surgery , psychiatry , vertebral body
Summary Aims Despite more than a century of research, spinal paralysis remains untreatable via biological means. A new understanding of spinal cord physiology and the introduction of membrane fusogens have provided new hope that a biological cure may soon become available. However, proof is needed from adequately powered animal studies. Methods and results Two groups of rats (n=9, study group, n=6 controls) were submitted to complete transection of the dorsal cord at T10. The animals were randomized to receive either saline or polyethylene glycol ( PEG ) in situ. After 4 weeks, the treated group had recovered ambulation vs none in the control group ( BBB scores; P =.0145). One control died. All animals were studied with somatosensory‐evoked potentials ( SSEP ) and diffusion tensor imaging ( DTI ). SSEP recovered postoperatively only in PEG ‐treated rats. At study end, DTI showed disappearance of the transection gap in the treated animals vs an enduring gap in controls (fractional anisotropy/ FA at level: P =.0008). Conclusions We show for the first time in an adequately powered study that the paralysis attendant to a complete transection of the spinal cord can be reversed. This opens the path to a severance‐reapposition cure of spinal paralysis, in which the injured segment is excised and the two stumps approximated after vertebrectomy/diskectomies.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here