| Literature DB >> 34685655 |
Munehisa Shinozaki1, Narihito Nagoshi2, Masaya Nakamura2, Hideyuki Okano1.
Abstract
Every year, 0.93 million people worldwide suffer from spinal cord injury (SCI) with irretrievable sequelae. Rehabilitation, currently the only available treatment, does not restore damaged tissues; therefore, the functional recovery of patients remains limited. The pathophysiology of spinal cord injuries is heterogeneous, implying that potential therapeutic targets differ depending on the time of injury onset, the degree of injury, or the spinal level of injury. In recent years, despite a significant number of clinical trials based on various types of stem cells, these aspects of injury have not been effectively considered, resulting in difficult outcomes of trials. In a specialty such as cancerology, precision medicine based on a patient's characteristics has brought indisputable therapeutic advances. The objective of the present review is to promote the development of precision medicine in the field of SCI. Here, we first describe the multifaceted pathophysiology of SCI, with the temporal changes after injury, the characteristics of the chronic phase, and the subtypes of complete injury. We then detail the appropriate targets and related mechanisms of the different types of stem cell therapy for each pathological condition. Finally, we highlight the great potential of stem cell therapy in cervical SCI.Entities:
Keywords: activities of daily living; complete injury; spinal cord injury; stem cell therapy; target of clinical trial; translational research
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34685655 PMCID: PMC8534136 DOI: 10.3390/cells10102676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Classification of Spinal Cord Injuries. (A) Incomplete injury with residual functional tissue. Recovery is expected with conventional treatment. (B) Pseudo-complete injury. Non-functional but reactivable tissue (light brown) extends through the spinal cord, breaking the craniocaudal functional continuity. Recovery is difficult with conventional treatment. Functional recovery is expected by promoting axonal elongation and promoting neural activity in reactivable tissue. (C) True complete injury. Aneural tissue (gray) spans the entire spinal cord, and treatment of surrounding reactivable tissue at the rostral or caudal location does not provide a functional cranial connection.
Figure 2Specificity of Cervical Spinal Cord Injury. (A) Expected Activity of Daily Living (ADL) subcategories in various levels of cervical spinal cord injury. Unlike thoracic and lumbar injuries, slight differences in the spinal level of injury increase the independent ADL. Modified from reference [146]. (B) True complete cervical cord injury. The aneural area crosses the spinal cord (gray), but the reactivable tissue (light brown) around it remains. The ADL of patients is expected to increase as the reactivable tissue becomes functional from stem cell therapy.