Abstract

BACKGROUND To determine the influence of different nervous tissue grafts on the regenerative activity of chronically injured spinal cord, an experimental study examining the expression of the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in chronically injured spinal cord subjected to neural grafting was performed. METHODS Three months after induced spinal cord injury, paraplegic Wistar rats were subjected to grafting of neural tissue. Grafts consisted of fetal brain cortex, fetal spinal cord, crushed adult peripheral nerve tissue, or fetal brain cortex combined with crushed adult peripheral nerve tissue. Four months later, the spinal cord was removed and the grafted zone was studied by means of immunohistochemical demonstration of PCNA. RESULTS Different patterns of PCNA expression were recorded in the different experimental groups. PCNA-immunostained cells in injured spinal cord tissue, mainly ependymal cells and astrocytes, increased when co-transplantation of fetal brain cortex and crushed adult peripheral nerve tissue was used, in comparison to other neural donor tissues. In the grafted tissue, proliferative activity was greater when fetal brain cortex, alone or with peripheral nerve, was used, in comparison to the use of fetal spinal cord or adult peripheral nerve tissue. Nevertheless, the number of PCNA-positive cells does not seem to be influenced by the presence of peripheral nerve tissue in the donor tissue. CONCLUSIONS Our present findings suggest the effectiveness of co-transplantation of peripheral nerve tissue and fetal brain tissue in attempts at spinal cord reconstruction after injury.

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