Abstract
Study design:Experimental, controlled, animal study.Objectives:To use non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to corroborate invasive studies showing progressive expansion of a hemorrhagic lesion during the early hours after spinal cord trauma and to assess the effect of glibenclamide, which blocks Sur1-Trpm4 channels implicated in post-traumatic capillary fragmentation, on lesion expansion.Setting:Baltimore.Methods:Adult female Long-Evans rats underwent unilateral impact trauma to the spinal cord at C7, which produced ipsilateral but not contralateral primary hemorrhage. In series 1 (six control rats and six administered glibenclamide), hemorrhagic lesion expansion was characterized using MRI at 1 and 24 h after trauma. In series 2, hemorrhagic lesion size was characterized on coronal tissue sections at 15 min (eight rats) and at 24 h after trauma (eight control rats and eight administered glibenclamide).Results:MRI (T2 hypodensity) showed that lesions expanded 2.3±0.33-fold (P<0.001) during the first 24 h in control rats, but only 1.2±0.07-fold (P>0.05) in glibenclamide-treated rats. Measuring the areas of hemorrhagic contusion on tissue sections at the epicenter showed that lesions expanded 2.2±0.12-fold (P<0.001) during the first 24 h in control rats, but only 1.1±0.05-fold (P>0.05) in glibenclamide- treated rats. Glibenclamide treatment was associated with significantly better neurological function (unilateral BBB scores) at 24 h in both the ipsilateral (median scores, 9 vs 0; P<0.001) and contralateral (median scores, 12 vs 2; P<0.001) hindlimbs.Conclusion:MRI is an accurate non-invasive imaging biomarker of lesion expansion and is a sensitive measure of the ability of glibenclamide to reduce lesion expansion.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 823-827 |
| Number of pages | 5 |
| Journal | Spinal Cord |
| Volume | 51 |
| Issue number | 11 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 2013 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- MRI
- Sur1-Trpm4 channel
- glibenclamide
- progressive hemorrhagic necrosis
- riluzole
- spinal cord injury