| Literature DB >> 26415563 |
Offer Zeira1, Nimrod Asiag2, Marina Aralla3, Erica Ghezzi4, Letizia Pettinari5, Laura Martinelli6, Daniele Zahirpour7, Maria Pia Dumas8, Davide Lupi9, Simone Scaccia10, Martin Konar11, Carlo Cantile12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-infectious inflammatory diseases of the canine central nervous system (CNS) are common idiopathic disorders grouped under the term meningoencephalomyelitis of unknown origin (MUO). Ante mortem diagnosis is achieved via assessment of clinical signs, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, but the definitive diagnosis needs histopathological examination. MUO are mostly considered as autoimmune CNS disorders, so that suppressing the immune reaction is the best management method for patients. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are under investigation to treat autoimmune and degenerative disorders due to their immunomodulatory and regenerative properties. This study aims to verify the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of MSCs treatment in canine idiopathic autoimmune inflammatory disorders of the CNS.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26415563 PMCID: PMC4587680 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-015-0402-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Initial treatment, BMMSC treatment, and follow-up
| Case | Initial treatment | MSCS treatment (IT/IA/IV) | 3 months (CSF) | 6 months (MRI/CSF) | 12 months (MRI/CSF) | 24 months (MRI/CSF) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prednisone | IT+IA | Negative | MRI negative | ||
| 2 | Prednisone | IT+IA | Positive | MRI negative | ||
| 3 | Prednisone | IT+IA | Negative | MRI better | ||
| 4 | Prednisone | IT+IV after 1 year also IT+IA | Negative | MRI negative | MRI negative | MRI negative |
| 5 | Prednisone | IT+IV | Negative | MRI better | MRI unchanged | MRI unchanged |
| 6 | Prednisone, PB, levetiracetam | IT+IV | Negative | MRI unchanged | ||
| 7 | Prednisone, PB | IT+IV | Negative | MRI negative | ||
| 8 | Prednisone, PB, levetiracetam, cytarabine | IT+IV | Negative | MRI negative |
Dog population, initial neurologic signs, and clinical diagnosis work-up
| Case | Breed | Sex | Age (years) | Neurologic signs | MRI | CSF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Labrador retriever | M | 4 | Acute onset of tremors, severe ataxia, cervical pain | Single brainstem lesion, hyperintense in T2 and FLAIR, variable contrast enhancement | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 2 | Chihuahua | M | 4 | Acute onset of depression, compulsive walking, cervical pain | Normal | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 3 | Half-breed | M | 3 | Acute onset of general tremors, tetraparesis, cervical pain | Diffuse spinal cord lesion at C3-C4, hyperintense in T2 and FLAIR, severe contrast enhancement | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 4 | Golden retriever | F | 2 | Acute onset of compulsive walking, cervical pain, depression, tetraparesis | Normal | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 5 | Cocker Spaniel | F | 3.5 | Peracute onset of circling, ataxia, vision deficit, cervical pain | Multifocal lesions in both white and gray matter, hyperintense in T2 and FLAIR, no contrast enhancement | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 6 | Poodle | F | 1 | Acute onset of severe circling, head tilt, seizures | Multifocal cerebrum and brainstem lesions, hyperintense in T2 and FLAIR, no contrast enhancement | Mixed pleocytosis (lymphocytic/mononuclear) |
| 7 | Yorkshire terrier | M | 1.5 | Acute onset of alternate mental status agitation-stupor, seizures | Diffused hyperintensity in T2 an FLAIR in all left brain hemisphere, variable contrast enhancement | Mononuclear pleocytosis |
| 8 | Boxer | F | 2 | Peracute onset of severe cervical pain and weakness, tremors, partial seizures | Multifocal lesions hyperintense in T2 and FLAIR, variable contrast enhancement | Mixed pleocytosis (mainly mononuclear) |
Fig. 1Histopathologic examination evidenced an angiocentric inflammatory lesion in the cerebral white matter composed of macrophages and mixed with lymphocytes and plasma cells (hematoxylin and eosin, ×400)
Fig. 2Cytological preparation of the cerebrospinal fluid of cases 2 (a) and 4 (b). a, b mononuclear pleocytosis. The cellular population was mainly represented by monocytes, macrophages, and lymphocytes. A small number of non degenerated neutrophils were also present (May-Grunwald Giemsa stain, ×100)
Fig. 3Dorsal and transversal MRI images of brainstem MOU lesion before and 6 months after treatment. The first MRI exam (A1 and A2) showed a single intra-axial hyperintense lesion (arrow) on the right side of brain stem, not too well-delineated, visible in T2-weighted sequences (A1) and FLAIR sequences (A2). There was no evidence of the lesion in the control MRI exam (B1 and B2) performed 6 months later
Fig. 4Sagittal T2 (FSE T2, TR 4710 TE 120; 3-mm slice thickness) through the cervical spine. a Before and b 40 days after initiation of therapy. a shows increased intramedullary signal from mid of C2 until mid of C6 (arrowheads). The changes are consistent with inflammatory edema. b The visible extent of the inflammation is significantly decreased—changes reach now from mid of C3 to the end of C4 (arrowheads)