Abstract
BackgroundSpinal cord injury (SCI) is a catastrophic trauma accompanied by intralesional bleeding and neuroinflammation. Recently, there is increasing interest in tranexamic acid (TXA), an anti-fibrinolytic drug, which can reduce the bleeding volume after physical trauma. However, the efficacy of TXA on the pathology of SCI remains unknown.MethodsAfter producing a contusion SCI at the thoracic level of mice, TXA was intraperitoneally administered and the bleeding volume in the lesion area was quantified. Tissue damage was evaluated by immunohistochemical and gene expression analyses. Since heme is one of the degraded products of red blood cells (RBCs) and damage-associated molecular pattern molecules (DAMPs), we examined the influence of heme on the pathology of SCI. Functional recovery was assessed using the open field motor score, a foot print analysis, a grid walk test, and a novel kinematic analysis system. Statistical analyses were performed using Wilcoxon’s rank-sum test, Dunnett’s test, and an ANOVA with the Tukey-Kramer post-hoc test.ResultsAfter SCI, the intralesional bleeding volume was correlated with the heme content and the demyelinated area at the lesion site, which were significantly reduced by the administration of TXA. In the injured spinal cord, toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), which is a DAMP receptor, was predominantly expressed in microglial cells. Heme stimulation increased TLR4 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) expression levels in primary microglial cells in a dose-dependent manner. Similarly to the in vitro experiments, the injection of non-lysed RBCs had little pathological influence on the spinal cord, whereas the injection of lysed RBCs or heme solution significantly upregulated the TLR4 and TNF expression in microglial cells. In TXA-treated SCI mice, the decreased expressions of TLR4 and TNF were observed at the lesion sites, accompanied by a significant reduction in the number of apoptotic cells and better functional recovery in comparison to saline-treated control mice.ConclusionThe administration of TXA ameliorated the intralesional cytotoxicity both by reducing the intralesional bleeding volume and preventing heme induction of the TLR4/TNF axis in the SCI lesion. Our findings suggest that TXA treatment may be a therapeutic option for acute-phase SCI.
Highlights
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a catastrophic trauma accompanied by intralesional bleeding and neuroinflammation
The influence of the intralesional Red blood cell (RBC) volume on the SCI pathology To elucidate the influence of intralesional bleeding on the spinal cord injury (SCI) pathology, we first assessed the spatiotemporal change in the red blood cells (RBCs) in the lesions
Since the severity of primary mechanical injury was equivalent among the three groups, these findings suggested that the demyelinated area was associated with the intralesional RBC volume and that the administration of tranexamic acid (TXA) could ameliorate pathological conditions associated with SCI, such as demyelination
Summary
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a catastrophic trauma accompanied by intralesional bleeding and neuroinflammation. After SCI trauma—despite the contribution of the hemostatic sequence—long-lasting substantial intralesional bleeding was observed for more than 7 days [4, 5] This prolonged bleeding after SCI is partly attributed to local consumption coagulopathy and endogenous plasminogen activators similar to the hyperfibrinolytic-type disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) [6, 7]. Under this fibrinolysis-predominant condition, heme is released from the lysed red blood cells (RBCs) as it passes through the disrupted BSCB without the formation of stable fibrin clots [8]. In the present study, we assessed the cytotoxic effects of heme on the pathology of SCI
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