Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Behavioral and histopathological studies of cervical spinal cord contusion injury in rats caused by an adapted weight-drop device Cover

Behavioral and histopathological studies of cervical spinal cord contusion injury in rats caused by an adapted weight-drop device

Open Access
|Sep 2019

References

  1. Muir GD, Webb AA. Mini-review: assessment of behavioural recovery following spinal cord injury in rats. Eur J Neurosci. 2000; 12:3079–86.
  2. Pearse DD, Lo TP Jr, Cho KS, Lynch MP, Garg MS, Marcillo AE, et al. Histopathological and behavioral characterization of a novel cervical spinal cord displacement contusion injury in the rat. J Neurotrauma. 2005; 22:680–702.
  3. Soblosky JS, Song JH, Dinh DH. Graded unilateral cervical spinal cord injury in the rat: evaluation of forelimb recovery and histological effects. Behav Brain Res. 2001; 119:1–13.
  4. Tan AM, Petruska JC, Mendell LM, Levine JM. Sensory afferents regenerated into dorsal columns after spinal cord injury remain in a chronic pathophysiological state. Exp Neurol. 2007; 206:257–68.
  5. Grow JL, Liu YQ, Barks JD. Can lateralizing sensorimotor deficits be identified after neonatal cerebral hypoxia–ischemia in rats? Dev Neurosci. 2003; 25:394–402.
  6. Takahashi Y, Nakajima Y. Dermatomes in the rat limbs as determined by antidromic stimulation of sensory C-fibers in spinal nerves. Pain. 1996; 67:197–202.
  7. Zhang Y, Xing S, Zhang J, Li J, Li C, Pei Z, Zeng J. Reduction of β-amyloid deposits by γ-secretase inhibitor is associated with the attenuation of secondary damage in the ipsilateral thalamus and sensory functional improvement after focal cortical infarction in hypertensive rats. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2011; 31:572–9.
  8. Muir GD, Webb AA, Kanagal S, Taylor L. Dorsolateral cervical spinal injury differentially affects forelimb and hindlimb action in rats. Eur J Neurosci. 2007; 25:1501–10.
  9. Dunham KA, Siriphorn A, Chompoopong S, Floyd CL. Characterization of a graded cervical hemicontusion spinal cord injury model in adult male rats. J Neurotrauma. 2010; 27:2091–106.
  10. Sribnick EA, Samantaray S, Das A, Smith J, Matzelle DD, Ray SK, Banik NL. Post-injury estrogen treatment of chronic spinal cord injury improves locomotor function in rats. J Neurosci Res. 2010; 88:1738–50.
  11. Scheff S, Rabchevsky A, Fugaccia I, Main J, Lumpp JE Jr. Experimental modeling of spinal cord injury: characterization of a force-defined injury device. J. Neurotrauma. 2003; 20:179–93.
  12. Onifer SM, Zhang YP, Burke DA, Brooks DL, Decker JA, McClure NJ, et al. Adult rat forelimb dysfunction after dorsal cervical spinal cord injury. Exp Neurol. 2005; 192:25–38.
  13. McKenna JE, Prusky GT, Whishaw IQ. Cervical motoneuron topography reflects the proximodistal organization of muscles and movements of the rat forelimb: a retrograde carbocyanine dye analysis. J Comp Neurol. 2000; 419:286–96.
  14. Gensel JC, Tovar CA, Hamers FP, Deibert RJ, Beattie MS, Bresnahan JC. Behavioral and histological characterization of unilateral cervical spinal cord contusion injury in rats. J Neurotrauma. 2006; 23:36–54.
  15. Anderson KD, Gunawan A, Steward O. Quantitative assessment of forelimb motor function after cervical spinal cord injury in rats: relationship to the corticospinal tract. Exp Neurol. 2005; 194:161–74.
  16. Metz GA, Whishaw IQ. Cortical and subcortical lesions impair skilled walking in the ladder rung walking test: a new task to evaluate fore- and hindlimb stepping, placing, and co-ordination. J Neurosci Methods. 2002; 115:169–79.
  17. Krishna V, Andrews H, Jin X, Yu J, Varma A, Wen X. A contusion model of severe spinal cord injury in rats. JoVE. 2013;78: 50111. doi: 10.3791/50111
  18. Panjabi MM, Wrathall JR. Biomechanical analysis of experimental spinal cord injury and functional loss. Spine 1988; 13:1365–1370.
  19. Geissler SA, Schmidt CE, Schallert T. Rodent models and behavioral outcomes of cervical spinal cord injury. J Spine. 2013; Suppl 4: 001. doi: 10.4172/2165-7939.S4-001
  20. Khan T, Havey RM, Sayers ST, Patwardhan A, King WW. Animal models of spinal cord contusion injuries. Lab Anim Sci. 1999; 49:161–72.
  21. Nardone R, Florea C, Höller Y, Brigo F, Versace V, Lochner P, Golaszewski S, Trinka E. Rodent, large animal and non-human primate models of spinal cord injury. Zoology (Jena). 2017; 123:101–14.
  22. Kwon BK, Hillyer J, Tetzlaff W. Translational research in spinal cord injury: a survey of opinion from the SCI community. J. Neurotrauma. 2010; 27:21–33.
  23. Onifer SM, Rabchevsky AG, Scheff SW. Rat models of traumatic spinal cord injury to assess motor recovery. ILAR J. 2007; 48:385–95.
  24. Beattie MS, Bresnahan JC. Cell death, repair, and recovery of function after spinal cord contusion injuries in rats. In: Kalb RG, Strittmatter SM, editors. Neurobiology of spinal cord injury. Humana Press; Totowa, NJ: 2000. pp. 1–21.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/abm-2019-0019 | Journal eISSN: 1875-855X | Journal ISSN: 1905-7415
Language: English
Page range: 189 - 198
Published on: Sep 25, 2019
Published by: Chulalongkorn University
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 6 issues per year

© 2019 Kanyaratana Bamrungsuk, Anchalee Vattarakorn, Namphung Thongta, Kanokwan Tilokskulchai, Sompol Tapechum, Supin Chompoopong, published by Chulalongkorn University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.