Spinal cord injury chronically depresses glucose uptake in the rodent model
•FDG uptake in the injured spinal cord is chronically depressed at the lesion site after injury.•FDG uptake at regions distal from the spinal cord injury site, including the cerebellum and the cervical spinal cord, is depressed chronically after injury.•FDG uptake depression is associated with reduc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroscience letters 2022-02, Vol.771, p.136416-136416, Article 136416 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •FDG uptake in the injured spinal cord is chronically depressed at the lesion site after injury.•FDG uptake at regions distal from the spinal cord injury site, including the cerebellum and the cervical spinal cord, is depressed chronically after injury.•FDG uptake depression is associated with reduced neuronal viability in the lesion site.
The pathophysiology following spinal cord injury (SCI) progresses from its lesion epicenter resulting in cellular and systemic changes acutely, sub-acutely and chronically. The symptoms of the SCI depend upon the severity of the injury and its location in the spinal cord. However, there is lack of studies that have longitudinally assessed acute through chronic in vivo changes following SCI. In this combinatorial study we fill this gap by evaluating acute to chronic effects of moderate SCI in rats. We have used fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) as a marker to assess glucose metabolism, motor function, and immunohistochemistry to examine changes following moderate SCI. Our results demonstrate decreased FDG uptake at the injury site chronically at days 28 and 90 post injury compared to baseline. This alteration in glucose uptake was not restricted to the lesion site, showing depressed FDG uptake in non-injured areas (cervical spinal cord and cerebellum). The alteration in glucose uptake was correlated with reductions in neuronal cell viability and increases in glial cell activation at 90 days at the lesion site, as well as chronic impairments in motor function. These data demonstrate the chronic effects of SCI on glucose metabolism both within the lesion and distally within the spinal cord and brain. |
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ISSN: | 0304-3940 1872-7972 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neulet.2021.136416 |