Abstract
Occlusion of the thoracic aorta and both subclavian arteries (XC) in the rat model produces spastic paraplegia. In order to characterize the lesion of white matter, 14 male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent XC for 10.5 to 12min, were observed for 32 days and assessed with a lesion score. A sham group of eight underwent surgical manipulations without XC. The spinal cords were studied by optical microscopy and electron microscopy. An additional group of normal animals (n = 8) underwent spinal cord blood flow measurement with the autoradiographic technique. Optical microscopy showed normal histology in sham operated rats and rats with aortic cross-clamp and lesion score = 2–4 (n = 5), rare changes in the white matter of rats with lesion score = 8 (n = 2), and demyelination of the anterior and lateral tracts of the white matter and motor neuron loss in the gray matter of rats with lesion score = 13–15 (n = 7) and spastic paraplegia. In this last group, electron microscopy disclosed severe axonal degeneration of corticospinal tracts. In the same region spinal cord blood flow was higher than the remaining white matter. This study confirms that spastic paraplegia observed in the rat model after XC is due to degeneration of the pyramidal tracts, perhaps more susceptible to injury due to the high spinal cord blood flow.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
LeMay D R, Neal S, Zelenock G B, D'Alecy L G . Paraplegia in the rat induced by aortic cross-clamping: Model characterization and glucose exacerbation of neurologic deficit. J Vase Surg 1987; 6: 383–390.
Follis F et al. Selective vulnerability of white matter during spinal cord ischemia. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 1993; 13: 170–178.
Sakurada O et al Measurement of local cerebral blood flow with iodo-[14C]-antipyrine. Am J Physiol 1978; 234: H59–H66.
Reivich M, Jehle J, Sokoloff L, Kety S S . Measurement of regional cerebral blood flow with antipyrine-[14C] in awake cats. J Appl Physiol 1969; 27: 296–300.
Paxinos G, Watson C . The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates. Academic Press: New York.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Blisard, K., Follis, F., Wong, R. et al. Degeneration of axons in the corticospinal tract secondary to spinal cord ischemia in rats. Spinal Cord 33, 136–140 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.1995.30
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.1995.30