• Journal of neurotrauma · Jun 2005

    Histopathological and behavioral characterization of a novel cervical spinal cord displacement contusion injury in the rat.

    • D D Pearse, T P Lo, K S Cho, M P Lynch, M S Garg, A E Marcillo, A R Sanchez, Y Cruz, and W D Dietrich.
    • The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, Neurological Surgery, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida 33101, USA. DPearse@miamiproject.med.miami.edu
    • J. Neurotrauma. 2005 Jun 1; 22 (6): 680-702.

    AbstractCervical contusive trauma accounts for the majority, of human spinal cord injury (SCI), yet experimental use of cervical contusion injury models has been limited. Considering that (1) the different ways of injuring the spinal cord (compression, contusion, and transection) induce very different processes of tissue damage and (2) the architecture of the spinal cord is not uniform, it is important to use a model that is more clinically applicable to human SCI. Therefore, in the current study we have developed a rat model of contusive, cervical SCI using the Electromagnetic Spinal Cord Injury Device (ESCID) developed at Ohio State University (OSU) to induce injury by spinal cord displacement. We used the device to perform mild, moderate and severe injuries (0.80, 0.95, and 1.1 mm displacements, respectively) with a single, brief displacement of <20 msec upon the exposed dorsal surface of the C5 cervical spinal cord of female (180-200 g) Fischer rats. Characterization of the model involved the analysis of the temporal histopathological progression of the injury over 9 weeks using histochemical stains to analyze white and gray mater integrity and immunohistochemistry to examine cellular changes and physiological responses within the injured spinal cord. Accompanying the histological analysis was a comprehensive determination of the behavioral functionality of the animals using a battery of motor tests. Characterization of this novel model is presented to enable and encourage its future use in the design and experimental testing of therapeutic strategies that may be used for human SCI.

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