| Literature DB >> 25309824 |
Sydney A Geissler1, Christine E Schmidt2, Timothy Schallert3.
Abstract
Rodent spinal cord injury (SCI) models have been developed to examine functional and physiological deficits after spinal cord injury with the hope that these models will elucidate information about human SCI. Models are needed to examine possible treatments and to understand histopathology after SCI; however, they should be considered carefully and chosen based on the goals of the study being performed. Contusion, compression, transection, and other models exist and have the potential to reveal important information about SCI that may be related to human SCI and the outcomes of treatment and timing of intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral assessment; Behavioral deficit; Cervical spinal cord injury; Forelimb function; Functional recovery; Regeneration; Rodent models; Spinal cord injury surgical models
Year: 2013 PMID: 25309824 PMCID: PMC4191831 DOI: 10.4172/2165-7939.S4-001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Spine ISSN: 2165-7939
Pros and cons of surgical models. Differences in surgical models allow researchers to choose the surgical model to best study their goals.
| Injury Model | Pros | Cons | Clinical Correlates |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Balloon Spring-loaded clip Modified forceps Static weight |
Control of time of application Control of force of application Useful to assess decompression time Inexpensive |
Decompression occurs much earlier than in clinical settings Extensive lamina removal causing extensive decompression |
Intervertebral disc burst injury Determine optimal decompression time |
|
MASCIC OSU Infinite Horizon PinPoint |
Reproducible lesions Useful to assess demyelination and axon sparing Considered most clinically relevant model |
Expensive |
Considered most clinically relevant model |
|
Dorsal hemisection Dorsal quadrant Lateral hemisection Dorsal column |
Useful to assess axonal regeneration Inexpensive |
Considered less clinically relevant |
Stab or shooting injury Brown-Sequard syndrome |