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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Olfactory mucosal cell transplants tested for spinal injury recovery

By Granger, Nicolas et al.·Published in Brain : a journal of neurology·2012·Department of Veterinary Medicine, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Autologous olfactory mucosal cell transplants in clinical spinal cord injury: a randomized double-blinded trial in a canine translational model.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with severe spinal cord injuries received either a transplant of their own olfactory mucosal cells or a placebo treatment to see if it would help them regain movement. The dogs that received the cell transplant showed better coordination between their front and back legs compared to those that only got the placebo. However, both groups did not show significant improvements in other areas of spinal cord function. This suggests that while the cell transplant helped with coordination, it didn't enhance overall spinal cord performance.

People also search for: dog spinal cord injury treatment · dog coordination problems · olfactory cell transplant for dogs

Abstract

This study was designed to determine whether an intervention proven effective in the laboratory to ameliorate the effects of experimental spinal cord injury could provide sufficient benefit to be of value to clinical cases. Intraspinal olfactory ensheathing cell transplantation improves locomotor outcome after spinal cord injury in 'proof of principle' experiments in rodents, suggesting the possibility of efficacy in human patients. However, laboratory animal spinal cord injury cannot accurately model the inherent heterogeneity of clinical patient cohorts, nor are all aspects of their spinal cord function readily amenable to objective evaluation. Here, we measured the effects of intraspinal transplantation of cells derived from olfactory mucosal cultures (containing a mean of ~50% olfactory ensheathing cells) in a population of spinal cord-injured companion dogs that accurately model many of the potential obstacles involved in transition from laboratory to clinic. Dogs with severe chronic thoracolumbar spinal cord injuries (equivalent to ASIA grade 'A' human patients at ~12 months after injury) were entered into a randomized double-blinded clinical trial in which they were allocated to receive either intraspinal autologous cells derived from olfactory mucosal cultures or injection of cell transport medium alone. Recipients of olfactory mucosal cell transplants gained significantly better fore-hind coordination than those dogs receiving cell transport medium alone. There were no significant differences in outcome between treatment groups in measures of long tract functionality. We conclude that intraspinal olfactory mucosal cell transplantation improves communication across the damaged region of the injured spinal cord, even in chronically injured individuals. However, we find no evidence for concomitant improvement in long tract function.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23169917/