| Literature DB >> 31720019 |
G B Telegin1, A N Minakov1, A S Chernov1, V N Manskikh2, D S Asyutin3, N A Konovalov3, A G Gabibov4.
Abstract
We developed and verified an original, minimally invasive method for surgical simulation of a posttraumatic spinal cord glial scar in rats. The model is intended for use as a biological platform for testing the stimulation of regenerative processes in the central nervous system. Unification of the model enables one to achieve versatility both for implantation techniques and for the development of system-action approaches. Faced with a standard structural defect of the spinal cord, researchers will have the unique opportunity to test in vivo promising methods for spinal function recovery in the posttraumatic period. We developed anesthetic support, surgical tactics, and a set of rehabilitation measures for the chronic postoperative period. Experimental exposure effects were preliminarily assessed in vivo using a standard technique for recording the motor activity of rats in the postoperative period of spinal cord injury. Our final conclusions were drawn based on an analysis of histological sections of the rat spinal cord glial scar in three mutually perpendicular planes. Copyright ® 2019 National Research University Higher School of Economics.Entities:
Keywords: axonal regeneration; cryoapplication; glial scar; laboratory rat; spinal cord injury; surgical simulation; unilateral hemilaminectomy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31720019 PMCID: PMC6826152 DOI: 10.32607/20758251-2019-11-3-75-81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Naturae ISSN: 2075-8251 Impact factor: 1.845
Fig. 2Hemilaminectomy of the T13 posterior arch in a rat, using a dental burr
Fig. 3Typical histological pattern of spinal cord cryodestruction on day 30 after the proposed surgical procedure: A – sagittal section (the walls of a crater-shaped defect are depicted by arrows). B – frontal section (the structural defect cavity is clearly visible); C – segmental section (the structural defect cavity is clearly visible). H&E staining, ×25 magnification
Fig. 4Morphology of the affected spinal cord area during hemilaminectomy (×200). A – intact tissue; B – reactive changes (neuropil rarefaction); C – necrosis area, arrows indicate cells of inflammatory infiltrate (lymphocytes or microglial elements)