Cell elimination as a strategy for repair in acute spinal cord injury Journal Article


Author: Kalderon, N.
Article Title: Cell elimination as a strategy for repair in acute spinal cord injury
Abstract: Following injury, as part of the wound-healing process, cell proliferation occurs mostly to replace damaged cells and to reconstitute the tissue back to normal condition/function. In the spinal cord some of the dividing cells following injury interfere with the repair processes. This interference occurs at the later stages of wound healing (the third week after injury) triggering chronic inflammation and progressive tissue decay that is the characteristic pathology of spinal cord injury. Specific cell elimination within a critical time window after injury can lead to repair in the acutely injured spinal cord. Cell proliferation events can be manipulated/modified by x-irradiation. Clinically, numerous radiation protocols (i.e., radiation therapy) have been developed that specifically eliminate the rapidly dividing cells without causing any noticeable/significant damage to the tissue as a whole. Radiation therapy when applied within the critical time window after injury prevents the onset of chronic inflammation thus leading to repair of structure and function. Various aspects of the development of this cell-elimination strategy for repair in acute spinal cord injury by utilizing radiation therapy are being reviewed. Topics reviewed here: identifying the window of opportunity; and the beneficial repair effects of radiation therapy in a transection injury model and in a model relevant to human injury, the contusion injury model. The possible involvement of cellular components of the blood-spinal cord barrier as the trigger of chronic inflammation and/or target of the radiation therapy is discussed. © 2005 Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Keywords: disease course; drug activity; pathogenesis; review; nonhuman; radiation dose; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; cell proliferation; animals; cell division; astrocyte; gliosis; in vivo study; angiogenesis; wound healing; disease model; cell damage; blood brain barrier; blood-brain barrier; glia cell; radiation therapy; ganciclovir; spinal cord function; spinal cord injury; tissue repair; x irradiation; spinal cord injuries; chronic inflammation; acute disease; wound repair; functional recovery; reactive gliosis; blood-spinal cord barrier; reactive astrocyte; cm 101
Journal Title: Current Pharmaceutical Design
Volume: 11
Issue: 10
ISSN: 1381-6128
Publisher: Bentham Science Publishers  
Date Published: 2005-01-01
Start Page: 1237
End Page: 1245
Language: English
DOI: 10.2174/1381612053507477
PUBMED: 15853680
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 7" - "Export Date: 24 October 2012" - "CODEN: CPDEF" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors