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Chronic thoracic hemisection spinal cord injury in adult rats induces a progressive decline in transmission from uninjured fibers to lumbar motoneurons
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  • Published: 11 August 2008

Chronic thoracic hemisection spinal cord injury in adult rats induces a progressive decline in transmission from uninjured fibers to lumbar motoneurons

  • Victor Arvanian1,
  • Lisa Schnell2,
  • Li Lou1,
  • Roobeh Golshani3,
  • Arsen Hunanyan1,
  • Arko Ghosh2,
  • Damien Pearse3,
  • John Robinson4,
  • Martin Schwab2,
  • James Fawcett5 &
  • …
  • Lorne Mendell1 

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Abstract

Although most spinal cord injuries are anatomically incomplete, only limited functional recovery has been observed in people and rats with partial lesions. To address why surviving fibers cannot mediate more complete recovery, we evaluated the physiological and anatomical status of spared fibers after unilateral hemisection (HX) of thoracic spinal cord in adult rats. We made intracellular and extracellular recordings at L5 (below HX) in response to electrical stimulation of contralateral white matter above (T6) and below (L1) HX. Responses from T6 displayed reduced amplitude, increased latency and elevated stimulus threshold in the fibers across from HX, beginning 1-2 weeks after HX. Ultrastructural analysis revealed demyelination of intact axons contralateral to the HX, with a time course similar to the conduction changes. Behavioral studies indicated partial recovery which arrested when conduction deficits began. These findings suggest a chronic pathological state in intact fibers and necessity for prompt treatment to minimize it.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. SUNY at Stony Brook, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior https://www.nature.com/nature

    Victor Arvanian, Li Lou, Arsen Hunanyan & Lorne Mendell

  2. University of Zurich, Brain Research Institute, Switzerland

    Lisa Schnell, Arko Ghosh & Martin Schwab

  3. Miami Project to Cure Paralysis https://www.nature.com/nature

    Roobeh Golshani & Damien Pearse

  4. SUNY at Stony Brook, Department of Psychology https://www.nature.com/nature

    John Robinson

  5. Cambridge University, Ctr Brain Repair, UK

    James Fawcett

Authors
  1. Victor Arvanian
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  2. Lisa Schnell
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  3. Li Lou
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  4. Roobeh Golshani
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  5. Arsen Hunanyan
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  6. Arko Ghosh
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  7. Damien Pearse
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  8. John Robinson
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  9. Martin Schwab
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  10. James Fawcett
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  11. Lorne Mendell
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Victor Arvanian.

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Cite this article

Arvanian, V., Schnell, L., Lou, L. et al. Chronic thoracic hemisection spinal cord injury in adult rats induces a progressive decline in transmission from uninjured fibers to lumbar motoneurons. Nat Prec (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2008.2165.1

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  • Received: 06 August 2008

  • Accepted: 11 August 2008

  • Published: 11 August 2008

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2008.2165.1

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Keywords

  • spinal cord injury
  • intracellular recording
  • motoneuron
  • demyelination
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