| Literature DB >> 34336912 |
Georgii B Telegin1, Alexey N Minakov1, Aleksandr S Chernov1, Vitaly A Kazakov1, Elena A Kalabina1, Vasily N Manskikh2, Dmitry S Asyutin3, Alexey A Belogurov4, Alexander G Gabibov4, Nikolay A Konovalov3, Aldo Spallone5,6.
Abstract
According to the World Health Organization, every year worldwide up to 500,000 people suffer a spinal cord injury (SCI). Various animal biomodels are essential for searching for novel protocols and therapeutic approaches for SCI treatment. We have developed an original model of post-traumatic spinal cord glial scarring in rats through cryoapplication. With this method the low-temperature liquid nitrogen is used for the cryodestruction of the spinal cord tissue. Forty-five Sprague Dawley (SD) non-linear male rats of the Specific-pathogen-free (SPF) category were included in this experimental study. A Th13 unilateral hemilaminectomy was performed with dental burr using an operating microscope. A specifically designed cryogenic probe was applied to the spinal cord for one minute through the created bone defect. The animals were euthanized at different time points ranging from 1 to 60 days after cold-induced injury. Their Th12-L1 vertebrae with the injured spinal cord region were removed "en bloc" for histological examination. Our data demonstrate that cryoapplication producing a topical cooling around-20°C, caused a highly standardized transmural lesion of the spinal cord in the dorsoventral direction. The lesion had an "hour-glass" shape on histological sections. During the entire study period (days 1-60 of the post-trauma period), the necrotic processes and the development of the glial scar (lesion evolution) were contained in the surgically approached vertebral space (Th13). Unlike other known experimental methods of SCI simulation (compression, contusion, etc.), the proposed technique is characterized by minimal invasiveness, high precision, and reproducibility. Also, histological findings, lesion size, and postoperative clinical course varied only slightly between different animals. An original design of the cryoprobe used in the study played a primary role in the achieving of these results. The spinal cord lesion's detailed functional morphology is described at different time points (1-60 days) after the produced cryoinjury. Also, changes in the number of macrophages at distinct time points, neoangiogenesis and the formation of the glial scar's fibrous component, including morphodynamic characteristics of its evolution, are analyzed. The proposed method of cryoapplication for inducing reproducible glial scars could facilitate a better understanding of the self-recovery processes in the damaged spinal cord. It would be evidently helpful for finding innovative approaches to the SCI treatment.Entities:
Keywords: biomodel; cryoapplication; glial scar; rat; spinal cord injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 34336912 PMCID: PMC8320592 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.607551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1(A) Macro- and microscopic patterns of the spinal cord lesion. (i) sample of the spinal cord together with the surrounding bone tissue. Lesion of the spinal cord (solid arrow); cryoapplication zone in the dura mater (dotted arrow); margins of Th13 vertebra (dotted lines). (ii) Panoramic image of a sagittal section of the spinal cord in the vertebral column on day 21 after the cryoinjury. The lesion is transmural, localized at the projection of the Th13 vertebra, has an ≪hour-glass≫ shape. Projections of the margins of the vertebra used for the surgical approach are shown by solid lines. (iii) Panoramic image of the transversal section of the spinal cord in the rostral direction from the epicenter of cryoapplication at day 14 after the cryoinjury. Unilateral lesion. (iv) Panoramic image of the transversal section of the spinal cord in the caudal direction from the epicenter of cryoapplication at day 14 after the cryoinjury. Unilateral lesion. B-D: H&E staining; sites of formed lesions (dotted lines). 500 μm scale bar used for all images. (B) Photomicrographs of the lesion in the rat spinal cord at 7 day after the cryoinjury. (i) Fragment of the central part of the lesion at the projection of spinal gray matter: multiple macrophages transforming into ≪grainy spheres≫ (solid lines), numerous siderophages (dotted arrows) destroy the late-stage hemorrhagic component in the necrotic site; erythrophagocytosis process is in place. (ii) Fragment of the peripheral part of the necrotic site in the rat spinal cord adjacent to the intact tissue: multiple thin-walled blood vessels, proliferation of the endothelium (solid arrows). (iii) The absence of collagen fibers in the peripheral portion of the cryolesion. (iv) Reactive activation of astroglia at the projection of ventral funiculi of spinal white matter. (C) Photomicrographs of the lesion in the rat spinal cord at 14 day after the cryoinjury. (i) Fragment of the central portion of the lesion at the projection of spinal gray matter: a decreasing percentage of macrophages in the total population of cells in the lesion (dotted arrows). Multiple newly formed blood vessels (solid arrows). (ii) Fragment of the peripheral portion of the lesion: further decrease in percentage of macrophages in the total population of cells in the lesion (dashed arrows), the emergence of large glial cells (solid arrows). Newly formed blood vessels (dotted arrow). (iii) Emergence of collagen fibers in the glial scar (blue color). (iv) Reactive activation of astroglia at the projection of ventral funiculi of spinal white matter. (D) Photomicrographs of the lesion in the rat spinal cord at 30 day after the cryoinjury. (i) Fragment of the central portion of the lesion at the projection of spinal gray matter: multiple macrophages distributed throughout the lesion against the background of numerous newly formed blood vessels. (ii) Fragment of the peripheral portion of the lesion adjacent to the intact tissue: large cystic cavities (shown by arrows) at the interface between the lesion and the intact spinal cord. (iii) The percentage of collagen fibers (blue color) is increasing in the glial scar structure. (iv) Multiple astrocytes at the projection of ventral funiculi of spinal white matter. (E) Photomicrographs of the lesion in the rat spinal cord at 60 day after the cryoinjury. (i) Fragment of the peripheral portion of the lesion adjacent to the intact tissue: large cystic cavities at the interface between the lesion and the intact spinal cord. (ii) Fragment of the peripheral portion of the lesion: multiple macrophages (dotted arrows) against the background of glial cells and glial fibers (solid arrows). (iii) Mature collagen fibers (blue color) in the structure of glial scar. (iv) Multiple astrocytes at the projection of spinal gray matter. (i), (ii) – H&E, (iii) – Azan trichrome, (iv) – Mallory's phosphotungstic acid haematoxylin (PTAH) staining. Magnification 200 × (i–iv) except Dii (100×) and Eii (200×).
Figure 2(A) Changes in the lesion size, the number of macrophages, volume of blood vessels, and connective tissue in the lesion during 60 days following the cryoinjury. (B) Mean BBB (Y-axis) score of the rats over a 2-month observation period (X-axis).