| Researchers Discover Mechanism of Natural Recovery from Spinal Cord Injury | |
Researchers have discovered that rats with spinal cord injuries show some
motor-function recovery several weeks after injury based on spontaneous
re-growth of spared nerves. This finding has potential to further advance
recovery after spinal cord injury.
The research was conducted at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Diego, and is
described in the March 13, 2001 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
In the study, researchers removed 97 percent of the connections in the rat
spinal cord that coordinate movement of the forepaw and foot. Despite this loss,
rats gradually began to recover coordinated movements of their forepaws and by
four weeks after the injury were no different from intact rats.
Study of their spinal cords under the microscope showed that a small proportion
of nerve fibers spared by the original injury -- only 3 percent -- grew new
connections to increase their number of contacts with other cells by 331
percent. Called sprouting, like the branches of a tree after pruning, this
re-growth occurred spontaneously without therapeutic intervention. When the
researchers prevented sprouting from occurring, functional recovery did not
occur.
Because approximately 40 percent of humans who suffer spinal cord injury, stroke
or head trauma also show spontaneous recovery of motor function, the researchers
believe the present findings may explain their recovery. For example, most
humans with spinal cord trauma have small rims of spared tissue-containing
nerves at the injury site, and many of these individuals show partial recovery
of function over weeks and months.
The UCSD investigators who conducted the study are now testing whether sprouting
can be enhanced experimentally to lead to better recovery. By nerve-site
delivery of nerve growth factors -- proteins that stimulate nerve growth -- the
researchers will determine whether sprouting can be enhanced and lead to further
recovery.
The current study was conducted in the lab of Mark Tuszynski, M.D., Ph.D., UCSD
associate professor of neurosciences and a neurologist with the VA Medical
Center. Based on their findings in rats, Tuszynski and his team are studying
monkeys to determine if similar sprouting and functional recovery occur, and if
potential therapies such as nerve growth factor can stimulate natural axon
re-growth.
In the rat experiments, surgical lesions were made to the corticospinal tract,
an important section of the spinal cord system, vital for controlling skilled
motor acts such as movements of limbs in rats and hands and feet in humans. The
researchers found that natural recovery of motor function in the rats occurred
when some spinal cord tissue -- as little as 3 percent -- survived the injury.
In post-mortem views of the rats' spinal cords, the researchers observed
re-growth of axons from the intact portion of the corticospinal tract. The
sprouting "probably accounts for the improvement in function that occurs in
humans weeks to months after spinal cord injuries, strokes or head trauma,"
Tuszynski says.
However, when the corticospinal tract was completely severed in the rats, the
researchers observed neither sprouting of axons nor functional recovery of motor
skills.
The researchers made lesions in the rodents' neck area, since most human spinal
cord injuries occur in the cervical, or neck region. Several variations of
lesions were made, to determine where and how the spinal cord was affected, and
to measure the degree of recovery of functional motor skills.
One group of rats had lesions made to the dorsal, or upper back region of the
spinal cord that contains 97 percent of corticopinal axons. Another group had
lesions to the ventral, or upper front side, that contains about 3 percent of
total axons. A third group received a dorsal lesion followed five weeks later by
a lesion to the ventral component. Both ventral and dorsal regions were severed
at the same time in a fourth group of rats, while a fifth group received a
lesion of the medullary region, which causes an effect similar to severance of
the ventral and dorsal regions together.
The functional abilities of the rats were measured by a pellet retrieval task.
Prior to the surgeries, the rats were trained daily to extend their forepaws,
grasp a food pellet, retract the limb and eat the pellet. Following surgery,
researchers took precise measurements of the animals' ability to perform these
tasks. Measurement of axonal sprouting was obtained with post-mortem studies of
the spinal cord neurons and axons.
Following complete lesions of the dorsal region, spontaneous sprouting occurred
in the uninjured, considerably smaller ventral tract, and the number of new
axonal connections increased by 331 percent. With the sprouting, the rats
experienced extensive recovery of hand movement.
No functional recovery was noted in three groups -- the rats with an initial
dorsal lesion, followed five weeks later by a ventral lesion; the rats with both
dorsal and ventral components severed at the same time; and the group with a
medullary lesion.
In addition to Tuszynski, authors of the PNAS paper were UCSD Department of
Neurosciences researchers Norbert Weidner, M.D.; Arvin Ner, B.S.; and Nima
Salimi, B.S.
The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health, Veterans Affairs, the
Canadian Spinal Research Organization, the Swiss Foundation for International
Research into Paraplegia on behalf of the Sandoz Family Foundation, and the
Hollfelder Foundation.
---University of California, San Diego
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