4.5 Article

The Relationship between Localized Subarachnoid Inflammation and Parenchymal Pathophysiology after Spinal Cord Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 1838-1849

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2012.2354

Keywords

arachnoiditis; blood-spinal cord barrier; chemokine; cytokine; inflammation; post-traumatic syringomyelia; spinal cord injury

Funding

  1. Physicians Services Incorporated
  2. Canadian Syringomyelia Network
  3. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  4. CIHR Vanier Graduate Scholarship
  5. Krembil Chair in Neural Repair and Regeneration

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Subarachnoid inflammation following spinal cord injury (SCI) can lead to the formation of localized subarachnoid scarring and the development of post-traumatic syringomyelia (PTS). While PTS is a devastating complication of SCI, its relative rarity (occurring symptomatically in about 5% of clinical cases), and lack of fundamental physiological insights, have led us to examine an animal model of traumatic SCI with induced arachnoiditis. We hypothesized that arachnoiditis associated with SCI would potentiate early parenchymal pathophysiology. To test this theory, we examined early spatial pathophysiology in four groups: (1) sham (non-injured controls), (2) arachnoiditis (intrathecal injection of kaolin), (3) SCI (35-g clip contusion/compression injury), and (4) PTS (intrathecal kaolin + SCI). Overall, there was greater parenchymal inflammation and scarring in the PTS group relative to the SCI group. This was demonstrated by significant increases in cytokine (IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta) and chemokine (MCP-1, GRO/KC, and MIP-1 alpha) production, MPO activity, blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB) permeability, and MMP-9 activity. However, parenchymal inflammatory mediator production (acute IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta, subacute chemokines), BSCB permeability, and fibrous scarring in the PTS group were larger than the sum of the SCI group and arachnoiditis group combined, suggesting that arachnoiditis does indeed potentiate parenchymal pathophysiology. Accordingly, these findings suggest that the development of arachnoiditis associated with SCI can lead to an exacerbation of the parenchymal injury, potentially impacting the outcome of this devastating condition.

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