CNS Injury & Nerve Regeneration Flashcards

1
Q

PNS or CNS can regenerate after damage?

A

PNS can regenerate after damage.

CNS can NOT regenerate after damage.

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2
Q

What occurs during spinal cord injury?

A
  • displacement of vertebral bones
  • axons damaged, cannot conduct signals
  • damaged neurons release glutamate –> electrotoxicity
  • neurotrophin-deprived death
  • swelling crushes longitudinal segments and damages white matter
  • cytokines form glial scar
  • glial scar inhibits regeneration
  • myelin has inhibitory factors
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3
Q

neurotrophin

A
  • neuron growth factor
  • allows neurons to survive (default w/o this is death)
  • allows efficient synapses/paths to continue

-loss of axon transmission causes neurotrophin-deprived death

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4
Q

what is the greatest source of cell death with a spinal cord injury?

A

Deprivation of neurotophin.

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5
Q

what triggers formation of glial scar?

A

cytokines

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6
Q

experimental strategies to repair spinal cord

A

Neuronal survival.
Altering terrain.
Role of inhibitors (inhibit the inhibitors).
Intrinsic capacity for regrowth.
Stem cell regenerative medicine.
Reconnection, training, synaptic plasticity.

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7
Q

neuronal survival

A

experimental strategy to repair spinal cord

1) reduce swelling
- via methylpredisone
- surgical decompression (break vertebrae to alleviate swelling)
- hypothermia (slows events)

2) apply factors
- NGF
- BDNF
- NT3
- FGF
- artemin

3) engineered cells

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8
Q

altering terrain

A
  • embryonic grafts (PNS can regenerate, so graft it onto CNS)
  • engineered bridges with collagen or secrete factors
  • replace myelin and oligodendrocytes (myelin secretes inhibitory factors)
  • show significant growth that stops the end of the permissive terrain
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9
Q

inhibitor factors

A
  • Nogo (neurons “no go”)
  • MAG: myelin associated glycoprotein
  • Receptor for Nogo/MAG: same receptor; if blocked it cripples motility by affecting cytoskeleton
  • Rho: downstream signalling pathway
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10
Q

what increases the intrinsic capacity for regrowth?

A
  • GAP43
  • tubulin
  • actin
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11
Q

stem cell regenerative medicine

A
  • implant stem cells at site of damage
  • cells can differentiate into neurons/glia, release BDNF (in animals)
  • cannot control/optimize for differentiation
  • clinical trial for safety/functional recovery
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12
Q

reconnection, training, synaptic plasticity

A
  • training paradigms to enhance regeneration (put legs on motorized bike pedals)
  • can increase plasticity beyond site of damage and functional recovery
  • debate over regeneration vs new sprouting; most likely new sprouting
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13
Q

neuroengineering approaches

A
  • pattern generators
  • brain computer interface
  • deep brain stimulation to reduce neuropathic pain
  • computer controlled exoskeleton/robotics
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14
Q

hope for clinical intervention

A
  • combinational therapies not yet effective
  • stem cell therapies, control over differentiation is promising approach
  • promise of neuroengineering, robotics, pattern generators
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15
Q

what factors exacerbate severity after spinal cord injury?

A

1) excitotoxicity
2) swelling w/i vertebral column
3) damage at one vertebral level interrupting transmission at all points below
4) subsequent loss of neurotrophins leading to cell death

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16
Q

what interventions could enhance growth and reconnection after spinal cord injury?

A

1) preventing swelling (methylprednisone, crack vertebral column)
2) provide permissive substrate for growth
3) block myelin and glial scar based inhibitors
4) provide neurotrophins
5) adding local guideposts
6) stem cells
7) neuroengineering

17
Q

the majority of neuronal cell death occurs weeks after mechanical damage and is due to…

A

deprivation of neurotophins

18
Q

sequence of mechanical damage in spinal cord injury

A
  1. small percentage of cells die
  2. damaged neurons release glutamate
  3. free radical formation leads to cell death
  4. deprivation of neutrophins
  5. largest percentage of neurons die