A Focal Traumatic Injury to the Neonatal Rodent Spinal Cord Causes an Immediate and Massive Spreading Depolarization Sustained by Chloride Ions, with Transient Network Dysfunction
In clinics, physical injuries to the spinal cord cause a temporary motor areflexia below lesion, known as spinal shock. This topic is still underexplored due to the lack of preclinical spinal cord injury (SCI) models that do not use anesthesia, which would affect spinal excitability. Our innovative...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cellular and molecular neurobiology 2025-01, Vol.45 (1), p.10, Article 10 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In clinics, physical injuries to the spinal cord cause a temporary motor areflexia below lesion, known as spinal shock. This topic is still underexplored due to the lack of preclinical spinal cord injury (SCI) models that do not use anesthesia, which would affect spinal excitability. Our innovative design considered a custom-made micro impactor that provides localized and calibrated strikes to the ventral surface of the thoracic spinal cord of the entire CNS isolated from neonatal rats. Before and after injury, multiple ventral root (VR) recordings continuously traced respiratory rhythm, baseline spontaneous activities, and electrically induced reflex responses. As early as 200 ms after the lowering of the impactor, an immediate transient depolarization spread from the injury site to the whole spinal cord with distinct segmental velocities. Stronger strikes induced higher potentials causing, close by the site of injury, a transient drop in spinal cord oxygenation (SCO
2
) and a massive cell death with a complete functional disconnection of input along the cord. Below the impact site, expiratory rhythm and spontaneous lumbar activity were suppressed. On lumbar VRs, reflex responses transiently halted but later recovered to control values, while electrically induced fictive locomotion remained perturbed. Moreover, low-ion modified Krebs solutions differently influenced impact-induced depolarizations, the magnitude of which amplified in low Cl
−
. Overall, our novel ex vivo platform traces the immediate functional consequences of impacts to the spinal cord during development. This basic study provides insights on the SCI pathophysiology, unveiling an immediate chloride dysregulation.
Graphical Abstract
In a neonatal rodent preparation of ex vivo CNS, a physical trauma to the cord is followed by an immediate depolarization spreading both caudally and rostrally. A massive impact-induced depolarization temporarily abolishes spontaneous motor discharges and electrically induced reflex responses below the level of injury. Transient areflexia mimics the spinal shock reported in clinics after SCI. |
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ISSN: | 1573-6830 0272-4340 1573-6830 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10571-024-01516-y |