2012
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2011.1818
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Mechanical Characterization of the Injured Spinal Cord after Lateral Spinal Hemisection Injury in the Rat

Abstract: The glial scar formed at the site of traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) has been classically hypothesized to be a potent physical and biochemical barrier to nerve regeneration. One longstanding hypothesis is that the scar acts as a physical barrier due to its increased stiffness in comparison to uninjured spinal cord tissue. However, the information regarding the mechanical properties of the glial scar in the current literature is mostly anecdotal and not well quantified. We monitored the mechanical relaxation… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…A more extreme example is the effect of a lesion on neural tissue. For example, the hemisection of a rat spinal cord leads to a decrease of the elastic modulus but an increase of the viscosity, measured by micro-indentation 2 and 8 weeks after injury 69 . The development of most neural implants is conducted in mammalian animal models.…”
Section: Important Features For Neural Implant Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A more extreme example is the effect of a lesion on neural tissue. For example, the hemisection of a rat spinal cord leads to a decrease of the elastic modulus but an increase of the viscosity, measured by micro-indentation 2 and 8 weeks after injury 69 . The development of most neural implants is conducted in mammalian animal models.…”
Section: Important Features For Neural Implant Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The CS-GAG hydrogels displayed minimal swelling, absorbing only 6.5 ± 0.019% of their initial weight at the end of 15 days, and showed no significant loss of mass during this period ( Figure.4B). In contrast, when hydrogels were incubated with media containing 33 milliunits (mU) of hyaluronidase, they lost 51.61 ± 0.0007% of their initial weight at the end of 15 days ( Figure.4B), indicating that the CS-GAG hydrogels retained substrate specificity to the native brain enzyme hyaluronidase which is known to degrade CS-GAGs at a slower rate than CNS tissue (brain and the spinal cord) is extremely soft, with compressive moduli ranging from around 0.5 -6.5 kPa respectively [59][60][61] . Hydrogels are the scaffolding materials of choice in interventional strategies involving drug and growth factor delivery, and cell transplantation applications for CNS repair, owing to their ability to conformally fill the defect, and match the mechanical properties of CNS tissue 62,63 .…”
Section: Composition Analysis Synthesis and Characterization Of Phomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Applying mechanical loads to living CNS tissue is frequently performed to measure stiffness and/or viscosity of the specimen after injury. For example, one study used a modifi ed atomic force microscope (AFM) to measure the unrelaxed elastic modulus of spinal cord tissue in anatomical regions that undergo glial scarring after traumatic SCI in rats [ 258 ]. The modulus of the spinal cord decreased at both 2 and 8 weeks post-injury at the site of the injury but the decrease was also observed across spinal levels rostral to the site of injury [ 258 ].…”
Section: Mechanical Loading To Constructs and Isolated Cell Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, one study used a modifi ed atomic force microscope (AFM) to measure the unrelaxed elastic modulus of spinal cord tissue in anatomical regions that undergo glial scarring after traumatic SCI in rats [ 258 ]. The modulus of the spinal cord decreased at both 2 and 8 weeks post-injury at the site of the injury but the decrease was also observed across spinal levels rostral to the site of injury [ 258 ]. Since the degree of spreading of the cellular and biochemical changes induced by SCI correlates to the extent of pain (see Sect.…”
Section: Mechanical Loading To Constructs and Isolated Cell Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%