| Literature DB >> 25126443 |
Alok Sharma1, Hemangi Sane2, Nandini Gokulchandran1, Dipti Khopkar2, Amruta Paranjape2, Jyothi Sundaram3, Sushant Gandhi3, Prerna Badhe1.
Abstract
Cell therapy is being widely explored in the management of stroke and has demonstrated great potential. It has been shown to assist in the remodeling of the central nervous system by inducing neurorestorative effect through the process of angiogenesis, neurogenesis, and reduction of glial scar formation. In this study, the effect of intrathecal administration of autologous bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMNCs) is analyzed on the recovery process of patients with chronic stroke. 24 patients diagnosed with chronic stroke were administered cell therapy, followed by multidisciplinary neurorehabilitation. They were assessed on functional independence measure (FIM) objectively, along with assessment of standing and walking balance, ambulation, and hand functions. Out of 24 patients, 12 improved in ambulation, 10 in hand functions, 6 in standing balance, and 9 in walking balance. Further factor analysis was done. Patients of the younger groups showed higher percentage of improvement in all the areas. Patients who underwent cell therapy within 2 years after the stroke showed better changes. Ischemic type of stroke had better recovery than the hemorrhagic stroke. This study demonstrates the potential of autologous BMMNCs intrathecal transplantation in improving the prognosis of functional recovery in chronic stage of stroke. Further clinical trials are recommended. This trial is registered with NCT02065778.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25126443 PMCID: PMC4121152 DOI: 10.1155/2014/234095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Figure 1Procedure for patient selection.
Demographic characteristics.
| Age | Minimum | 27 |
| Maximum | 79 | |
| Mean | 57 | |
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| Gender | Males | 15 (62.5%) |
| Females | 9 (37.5%) | |
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| H/O diabetes | Present | 8 (33.3%) |
| Absent | 16 (66.7%) | |
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| H/O hypertension | Present | 15 (62.5%) |
| Absent | 9 (37.5%) | |
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| Type of stroke | Ischemic | 14 (58%) |
| Hemorrhagic | 10 (42%) | |
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| Time since stroke (months) | Minimum | 4 |
| Maximum | 144 | |
| Mean | 40.54 | |
| Std dev. | 31.29 | |
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| Follow-up period (months) | Minimum | 6 |
| Maximum | 54 (4 and half years) | |
| Mean | 30 (2 and half years) | |
Figure 2PET scans of 3 patients before and after cell therapy. Increased FDG uptake is seen in all 3 patients in the postintervention PET-CT scans. The blue areas represent hypometabolic areas, green areas represent normal metabolic activity, and black areas represent absent metabolic activity (primary area of stroke). All 3 images show reduction in the blue areas and increase in the green area, showing improved metabolic activity. (a) Increased FDG uptake is seen in left parietal and temporal lobes indicating increased metabolic activity. (b) Increased FDG uptake is seen in the left frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes, along with left hippocampus, parahippocampus, and left amygdale. (c) Increased FDG uptake is seen in left frontal, parietal lobes. There is also increased FDG uptake in the right parietal lobe.
Comparative analysis of FIM in patients before and after cell therapy (N = 24).
| Mean pre-FIM | Mean post-FIM | Significance ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FIM score | 73.67 | 78.17 | 0.007 |
Percentage analysis of effect of each factor on the recovery of 24 patients with stroke (n = 24) (% of improvement) (values in brackets indicate number of patients improved).
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Total patients improved | Time since stroke | Age | Type of stroke | Side of involvement of brain | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <2 yrs ( | >2 yrs ( | <60 yrs ( | >60 yrs ( | Ischemic ( | Hemorrhagic ( | Right ( | Left ( | ||
| Ambulation | (12) 50 | (5) 50 | (7) 50 | (9) 64 | (2) 20 | (9) 64 | (3) 30 | (7) 58 | (5) 42 |
| Hand functions | (10) 42 | (5) 50 | (5) 36 | (8) 57 | (5) 50 | (7) 50 | (3) 30 | (5) 42 | (5) 42 |
| Standing balance | (6) 25 | (3) 30 | (3) 21 | (5) 36 | (1) 10 | (4) 29 | (2) 20 | (4) 33 | (2) 17 |
| Walking balance | (9) 38 | (4) 40 | (4) 29 | (7) 50 | (1) 10 | (7) 50 | (2) 20 | (5) 42 | (2) 17 |
| FIM | (9) 38 | (5) 50 | (3) 21 | (6) 43 | (3) 30 | (5) 36 | (4) 40 | (3) 25 | (6) 50 |
Figure 3Graph representing comparison of symptomatic improvement and functional improvement in patients of ≤2 and >2 years of onset of stroke.
Figure 4Graph representing comparison of symptomatic improvement and functional improvement in patients with age ≤60 and >60 years.
Figure 5Graph representing comparison of symptomatic improvement in patients with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.
Figure 6Graph representing comparison of symptomatic improvement in patients with the involvement of left and right brain.