Abstract

There are more than 50 times the number of chronic-phase spinal cord injury (SCI) patients than there are acute patients, and over half of all SCI patients are severely disabled. However, research focusing on chronic severe contusional SCI remains very rare. Here, we evaluated whether chondroitinase ABC (C-ABC), a degradative enzyme directed against chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), and treadmill rehabilitation could exert synergistic therapeutic actions against chronic severe contusional SCI. First, we induced severe contusional SCI in adult rats, and administered C-ABC intrathecally at 6 weeks post-injury for a period of one week. Next, we performed treadmill rehabilitation from weeks 6 to 14 after SCI, for a total period of eight weeks. The initiation of treadmill rehabilitation triggered slight recovery between weeks 6 and 9, whereas C-ABC administration stimulated a third phase of recovery between weeks 12 and 14. Histologically, the C-ABC-treated rats showed an increase in the transverse residual tissue area and the extent of neuronal fiber regeneration at a site caudal to the lesion epicenter, and regrowth of putatively regenerating serotonergic fibers was significantly increased at the epicenter. We suggest that, when combined with intensive rehabilitation, C-ABC may play a beneficial role, even in severe and chronic SCI.

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