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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Therapeutic potential of mesenchymal stem cells transplantation on traumatic facial nerve paralysis in two horses.

Journal:
Veterinary research communications
Year:
2025
Authors:
de Oliveira Ferreira, Lucas Vinícius et al.
Affiliation:
School of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science · Brazil
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

This study looked at using a type of cell therapy to help two horses that had long-term facial nerve paralysis, which caused issues like drooping lips and a crooked nostril. Both horses had not improved with regular treatments, so they received special stem cell transplants to try to heal their nerves. One horse got its own stem cells from bone marrow four months after the injury, while the other horse received stem cells from fat tissue from another horse, with three treatments spaced a month apart starting two months after the injury. After the treatments, both horses showed significant improvement, with one recovering in three months and the other in four months. This suggests that stem cell therapy could be a promising option for treating similar nerve injuries in horses.

Abstract

Cell-based therapy has emerged as a promising strategy for treating peripheral nervous system (PNS) injuries across different species. However, there is a scarcity in the literature regarding the transplantation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for treating PNS injuries in horses. This report aims to describe the therapeutic potential of equine MSC transplantation in two horses with chronic traumatic facial nerve paralysis. Both horses presented with lip ptosis and right deviation of the nostril and upper lip, being clinically diagnosed with left facial nerve paralysis. Due to the refractoriness to conventional anti-inflammatory treatments, cell-based therapy was chosen. One horse received an autologous transplant of equine bone marrow-derived MSCs (EqBM-MSCs) four months after the traumatic event, while the other underwent three transplants of allogeneic equine adipose tissue-derived MSCs (EqAT-MSCs) at 30-day intervals, starting two months after the injury. All transplants were performed at three different sites around the facial nerve, at the level of bifurcation of the buccal branch in both horses. Physical and neurological assessments revealed significant clinical recovery within three months for the first horse and four months for the second. These findings demonstrated that equine MSCs transplants have great therapeutic potential for chronic traumatic facial nerve paralysis in horses, highlighting the relevance of MSCs- based therapy for peripheral nerve injuries.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39998709/