TY - JOUR
T1 - Spinal cord injury in hypertonic newborns after antenatal hypoxia-ischemia in a rabbit model of cerebral palsy
AU - Drobyshevsky, Alexander
AU - Quinlan, Katharina A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health [R01 NS091278-01A1 (AD)] and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, WA [grant ID 1119410]. Authors are grateful to Dr. Kehuan Luo for the help with animal preparation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - While antenatal hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) is a well-established cause of brain injury, the effects of H-I on the spinal cord remain undefined. This study examined whether hypertonia in rabbits was accompanied by changes in spinal architecture. Rabbit dams underwent global fetal H-I at embryonic day 25 for 40 min. High resolution diffusion tensor imaging was performed on fixed neonatal CNS. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and regional volumetric measurements were compared between kits with and without hypertonia after H-I and sham controls using Tract Based Spatial Statistics. Hypertonic kits showed evidence of damage from hypoxia not only in the brain, but in spinal cord as well. Hypertonic kits showed reduced FA and thickness in corticospinal tracts, external capsule, fimbria, and in white and gray matter of both cervical and lumbar spinal cord. Dorsal white matter of the spinal cord was the exception, where there was thickening and increased FA in hypertonic kits. Direct damage to the spinal cord was demonstrated in a subset of dams imaged during H-I with a 3 T magnetic resonance scanner, where apparent diffusion coefficient in fetal spinal cords acutely decreased during hypoxia. Hypertonic kits showed subsequent decreases in lumbar motoneuron counts and extensive TUNEL- and Fluoro-Jade C-positive labeling was present in the spinal cord 48 h after H-I, demonstrating spinal neurodegeneration. We speculate that global H-I causes significant loss of both spinal white and gray matter in hypertonic newborns due to direct H-I injury to the spinal cord as well as due to upstream brain injury and consequent loss of descending projections.
AB - While antenatal hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) is a well-established cause of brain injury, the effects of H-I on the spinal cord remain undefined. This study examined whether hypertonia in rabbits was accompanied by changes in spinal architecture. Rabbit dams underwent global fetal H-I at embryonic day 25 for 40 min. High resolution diffusion tensor imaging was performed on fixed neonatal CNS. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and regional volumetric measurements were compared between kits with and without hypertonia after H-I and sham controls using Tract Based Spatial Statistics. Hypertonic kits showed evidence of damage from hypoxia not only in the brain, but in spinal cord as well. Hypertonic kits showed reduced FA and thickness in corticospinal tracts, external capsule, fimbria, and in white and gray matter of both cervical and lumbar spinal cord. Dorsal white matter of the spinal cord was the exception, where there was thickening and increased FA in hypertonic kits. Direct damage to the spinal cord was demonstrated in a subset of dams imaged during H-I with a 3 T magnetic resonance scanner, where apparent diffusion coefficient in fetal spinal cords acutely decreased during hypoxia. Hypertonic kits showed subsequent decreases in lumbar motoneuron counts and extensive TUNEL- and Fluoro-Jade C-positive labeling was present in the spinal cord 48 h after H-I, demonstrating spinal neurodegeneration. We speculate that global H-I causes significant loss of both spinal white and gray matter in hypertonic newborns due to direct H-I injury to the spinal cord as well as due to upstream brain injury and consequent loss of descending projections.
KW - Cerebral palsy
KW - Diffusion tensor imaging
KW - Hypoxia-ischemia
KW - Perinatal brain injury
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U2 - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2017.03.017
DO - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2017.03.017
M3 - Article
C2 - 28347765
AN - SCOPUS:85016334412
SN - 0014-4886
VL - 293
SP - 13
EP - 26
JO - Neurodegeneration
JF - Neurodegeneration
ER -