Abstract

To examine the clinical meaning of the changes in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) expression and activity after spinal cord injury (SCI) according to the age of the experiment animal. Ten 5- and 16-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats were laminectomized at T10 and SCI induced at this level using a New York impactor. Outcome measures to assess SCI utilized the Basso-Beatti-Bresnahan scale to quantitate hind limb motor dysfunction as a functional outcome measure. NOS isoforms (nNOS, neuronal NOS; iNOS, inducible NOS; and eNOS, endothelial NOS) were also immunolocalized in sections of control and spinal cord injury in the two sample groups using specific monoclonal antibodies. Student's t-test evaluated the difference between the young and adult rats, and P<0.05 was considered as significant value. As the expression of nNOS on the spinal gray matter of the adult rat decreased, eNOS activity increased. Different from the adult rat, expression of the nNOS in the young rat was maintained until 1 day after SCI, and compared with the adult rat; eNOS activity was increased in the vessels from the damaged gray matter area after 7 days of SCI. iNOS expression was maintained until the 7th day of SCI on the adult rat, but iNOS expression after 7 days of SCI on young rat decreased. The young rat showed relatively less motor disability on the hind limb when compared with the adult rat, and had a rapid recovery. Neural protective eNOS activity increased after SCI in the young rat, and neural destructive iNOS expression was more remarkable in the adult rat.

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