The neuroanatomical–functional paradox in spinal cord injury (original) (raw)
Marino, R. J., Ditunno, J. F. Jr., Donovan, W. H. & Maynard, F. Jr. Neurologic recovery after traumatic spinal cord injury: data from the Model Spinal Cord Injury Systems. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.80, 1391–1396 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fawcett, J. W. et al. Guidelines for the conduct of clinical trials for spinal cord injury as developed by the ICCP panel: spontaneous recovery after spinal cord injury and statistical power needed for therapeutic clinical trials. Spinal Cord45, 190–205 (2007). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Schucht, P., Raineteau, O., Schwab, M. E. & Fouad, K. Anatomical correlates of locomotor recovery following dorsal and ventral lesions of the rat spinal cord. Exp. Neurol.176, 143–153 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Hurd, C., Weishaupt, N. & Fouad, K. Anatomical correlates of recovery in single pellet reaching in spinal cord injured rats. Exp. Neurol.247, 605–614 (2013). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fouad, K., Hurd, C. & Magnuson, D. S. Functional testing in animal models of spinal cord injury: not as straight forward as one would think. Front. Integr. Neurosci.7, 85 (2013). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Steward, O., Popovich, P. G., Dietrich, W. D. & Kleitman, N. Replication and reproducibility in spinal cord injury research. Exp. Neurol.233, 597–605 (2012). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Lam, C. J., Assinck, P., Liu, J., Tetzlaff, W. & Oxland, T. R. Impact depth and the interaction with impact speed affect the severity of contusion spinal cord injury in rats. J. Neurotrauma31, 1985–1997 (2014). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Ballermann, M. & Fouad, K. Spontaneous locomotor recovery in spinal cord injured rats is accompanied by anatomical plasticity of reticulospinal fibers. Eur. J. Neurosci.23, 1988–1996 (2006). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Martinez, M., Delivet-Mongrain, H., Leblond, H. & Rossignol, S. Recovery of hindlimb locomotion after incomplete spinal cord injury in the cat involves spontaneous compensatory changes within the spinal locomotor circuitry. J. Neurophysiol.106, 1969–1984 (2011). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Loy, D. N. et al. Both dorsal and ventral spinal cord pathways contribute to overground locomotion in the adult rat. Exp. Neurol.177, 575–580 (2002). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Brustein, E. & Rossignol, S. Recovery of locomotion after ventral and ventrolateral spinal lesions in the cat. I. Deficits and adaptive mechanisms. J. Neurophysiol.80, 1245–1267 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Filli, L. et al. Bridging the gap: a reticulo-propriospinal detour bypassing an incomplete spinal cord injury. J. Neurosci.34, 13399–13410 (2014). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Aboul-Enein, F., Weiser, P., Höftberger, R., Lassmann, H. & Bradl, M. Transient axonal injury in the absence of demyelination: a correlate of clinical disease in acute experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Acta Neuropathol.111, 539–547 (2006). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kerschensteiner, M., Schwab, M. E., Lichtman, J. W. & Misgeld, T. In vivo imaging of axonal degeneration and regeneration in the injured spinal cord. Nat. Med.11, 572–577 (2005). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Duncan, G. J. et al. Locomotor recovery following contusive spinal cord injury does not require oligodendrocyte remyelination. Nat. Commun.9, 3066 (2018). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Pukos, N., Goodus, M. T., Sahinkaya, F. R. & McTigue, D. M. Myelin status and oligodendrocyte lineage cells over time after spinal cord injury: what do we know and what still needs to be unwrapped? Glia67, 2178–2202 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Chen, H. S., Holmes, N., Liu, J., Tetzlaff, W. & Kozlowski, P. Validating myelin water imaging with transmission electron microscopy in a rat spinal cord injury model. Neuroimage153, 122–130 (2017). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Goldstein, B., Hammond, M. C., Stiens, S. A. & Little, J. W. Posttraumatic syringomyelia: profound neuronal loss, yet preserved function. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.79, 107–112 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Dreizin, D. et al. Will the real SCIWORA please stand up? exploring clinicoradiologic mismatch in closed spinal cord injuries. AJR Am. J. Roentgenol.205, 853–860 (2015). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Curt, A. The translational dialogue in spinal cord injury research. Spinal Cord50, 352–357 (2012). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Popovich, P. G. et al. The neuropathological and behavioral consequences of intraspinal microglial/macrophage activation. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol.61, 623–633 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Pouratian, N. & Bookheimer, S. Y. The reliability of neuroanatomy as a predictor of eloquence: a review. Neurosurg. Focus.28, E3 (2002). Article Google Scholar
Stepien, A. E., Tripodi, M. & Arber, S. Monosynaptic rabies virus reveals premotor network organization and synaptic specificity of cholinergic partition cells. Neuron68, 456–472 (2010). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Conta, A. C. & Stelzner, D. J. Differential vulnerability of propriospinal tract neurons to spinal cord contusion injury. J. Comp. Neurol.479, 347–359 (2004). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Filli, L. & Schwab, M. E. Structural and functional reorganization of propriospinal connections promotes functional recovery after spinal cord injury. Neural Regen. Res.10, 509–513 (2015). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Miles, G. B., Hartley, R., Todd, A. J. & Brownstone, R. M. Spinal cholinergic interneurons regulate the excitability of motoneurons during locomotion. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA104, 2448–2453 (2007). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Kirshblum, S. et al. The impact of sacral sensory sparing in motor complete spinal cord injury. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.92, 376–383 (2011). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Waters, R. L., Adkins, R. H. & Yakura, J. S. Definition of complete spinal cord injury. Paraplegia29, 573–581 (1991). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Zdunczyk, A. et al. The corticospinal reserve capacity: reorganization of motor area and excitability as a novel pathophysiological concept in cervical myelopathy. Neurosurgery83, 810–818 (2018). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Torres-Espín, A. et al. Eliciting inflammation enables successful rehabilitative training in chronic spinal cord injury. Brain141, 1946–1962 (2018). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Kanagal, S. G. & Muir, G. D. Task-dependent compensation after pyramidal tract and dorsolateral spinal lesions in rats. Exp. Neurol.216, 193–206 (2009). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Whishaw, I. Q., Gorny, B. & Sarna, J. Paw and limb use in skilled and spontaneous reaching after pyramidal tract, red nucleus and combined lesions in the rat: behavioral and anatomical dissociations. Behav. Brain Res.93, 167–183 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Curt, A., Van Hedel, H. J. A., Klaus, D. & Dietz, V., EM-SCI Study Group. Recovery from a spinal cord injury: significance of compensation, neural plasticity, and repair. J. Neurotrauma.25, 677–685 (2008). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Fouad, K., Pedersen, V., Schwab, M. E. & Brösamle, C. Cervical sprouting of corticospinal fibers after thoracic spinal cord injury accompanies shifts in evoked motor responses. Curr. Biol.11, 1766–1770 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bareyre, F. M. et al. The injured spinal cord spontaneously forms a new intraspinal circuit in adult rats. Nat. Neurosci.7, 269–277 (2004). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Krajacic, A., Weishaupt, N., Girgis, J., Tetzlaff, W. & Fouad, K. Training-induced plasticity in rats with cervical spinal cord injury: effects and side effects. Behav. Brain Res.214, 323–331 (2010). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
van den Brand, R. et al. Restoring voluntary control of locomotion after paralyzing spinal cord injury. Science336, 1182–1185 (2012). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Wang, Z., Reynolds, A., Kirry, A., Nienhaus, C. & Blackmore, M. G. Overexpression of Sox11 promotes corticospinal tract regeneration after spinal injury while interfering with functional recovery. J. Neurosci.35, 3139–3145 (2015). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Jayaprakash, N. et al. Optogenetic interrogation of functional synapse formation by corticospinal tract axons in the injured spinal cord. J. Neurosci.36, 5877–5890 (2016). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Popovich, P. G., Lemeshow, S., Gensel, J. C. & Tovar, C. A. Independent evaluation of the effects of glibenclamide on reducing progressive hemorrhagic necrosis after cervical spinal cord injury. Exp. Neurol.233, 615–622 (2002). Article Google Scholar
Simard, J. M., Popovich, P. G., Tsymbalyuk, O. & Gerzanich, V. Spinal cord injury with unilateral versus bilateral primary hemorrhage-effects of glibenclamide. Exp. Neurol.233, 829–835 (2012). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Watzlawick, R. et al. Outcome heterogeneity and bias in acute experimental spinal cord injury: a meta-analysis. Neurology93, e40–e51 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Begley, C. G. & Ioannidis, J. P. Reproducibility in science: improving the standard for basic and preclinical research. Circ. Res.116, 116–126 (2015). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fouad, K. et al. FAIR SCI ahead: the evolution of the open data commons for pre-clinical spinal cord injury research. J. Neurotrauma37, 831–838 (2020). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Hotamisligil, G. S. Inflammation, metaflammation and immunometabolic disorders. Nature542, 177–185 (2017). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Failli, V. et al. Functional neurological recovery after spinal cord injury is impaired in patients with infections. Brain135, 3238–3250 (2012). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kopp, M. A. et al. Long-term functional outcome in patients with acquired infections after acute spinal cord injury. Neurology88, 892–900 (2017). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Jaja, B. N. R. et al. Association of pneumonia, wound infection, and sepsis with clinical outcomes after acute traumatic spinal cord injury. J. Neurotrauma36, 3044–3050 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Gallagher, M. J. et al. Markedly deranged injury site metabolism and impaired functional recovery in acute spinal cord injury patients with fever. Crit. Care Med.46, 1150–1157 (2018). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kobayakawa, K. et al. Acute hyperglycemia impairs functional improvement after spinal cord injury in mice and humans. Sci. Transl Med.6, 256ra137 (2014). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Ryken, T. C. et al. The acute cardiopulmonary management of patients with cervical spinal cord injuries. Neurosurgery72 (Suppl. 2), 84–92 (2013). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Ehsanian, R. et al. Exploration of surgical blood pressure management and expected motor recovery in individuals with traumatic spinal cord injury. Spinal Cord58, 377–386 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Gallagher, M. J., Hogg, F. R. A., Zoumprouli, A., Papadopoulos, M. C. & Saadoun, S. Spinal cord blood flow in patients with acute spinal cord injuries. J. Neurotrauma36, 919–929 (2019). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Schmidt, E. K. A. et al. Fecal transplant prevents gut dysbiosis and anxiety-like behaviour after spinal cord injury in rats. PLoS ONE15, e0226128 (2020). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Ankeny, D. P., Guan, Z. & Popovich, P. G. B cells produce pathogenic antibodies and impair recovery after spinal cord injury in mice. J. Clin. Invest.119, 2990–2999 (2009). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Schwab, J. M., Zhang, Y., Kopp, M. A., Brommer, B. & Popovich, P. G. The paradox of chronic neuroinflammation, systemic immune suppression, autoimmunity after traumatic chronic spinal cord injury. Exp. Neurol.258, 121–129 (2014). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Shibata, D., Cain, K., Tanzi, P., Zierath, D. & Becker, K. Myelin basic protein autoantibodies, white matter disease and stroke outcome. J. Neuroimmunol.252, 106–112 (2012). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Diamond, B., Huerta, P. T., Mina-Osorio, P., Kowal, C. & Volpe, B. T. Losing your nerves? Maybe it’s the antibodies. Nat. Rev. Immunol.9, 449–456 (2009). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Freund, P. et al. MRI investigation of the sensorimotor cortex and the corticospinal tract after acute spinal cord injury: a prospective longitudinal study. Lancet Neurol.12, 873–881 (2013). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
James, N. D. et al. Conduction failure following spinal cord injury: functional and anatomical changes from acute to chronic stages. J. Neurosci.31, 18543–18555 (2011). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Catalano, S. M. & Shatz, C. J. Activity-dependent cortical target selection by thalamic axons. Science281, 559–562 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Zhang, L. I. & Poo, M. M. Electrical activity and development of neural circuits. Nat. Neurosci.4 (Suppl.), 1207–1214 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ditunno, J. F. Jr & Formal, C. S. Chronic spinal cord injury. N. Engl. J. Med.330, 550–556 (1994). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kirshblum, S., Millis, S., McKinley, W. & Tulsky, D. Late neurologic recovery after traumatic spinal cord injury. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.85, 1811–1817 (2004). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
el Masry, W. S. Physiological instability of the spinal cord following injury. Paraplegia31, 273–275 (1993). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Chen, Q., Smith, G. M. & Shine, H. D. Immune activation is required for NT-3-induced axonal plasticity in chronic spinal cord injury. Exp. Neurol.209, 497–509 (2008). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Beauparlant, J. et al. Undirected compensatory plasticity contributes to neuronal dysfunction after severe spinal cord injury. Brain136, 3347–3361 (2013). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Baldassarre, A. et al. Dissociated functional connectivity profiles for motor and attention deficits in acute right-hemisphere stroke. Brain139, 2024–2038 (2016). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Min, Y. S. et al. Alteration of resting-state brain sensorimotor connectivity following spinal cord injury: a resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study. J. Neurotrauma32, 1422–1427 (2015). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Dietz, V. Behavior of spinal neurons deprived of supraspinal input. Nat. Rev. Neurol.6, 167–174 (2010). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Vallotton, K. et al. Width and neurophysiologic properties of tissue bridges predict recovery after cervical injury. Neurology92, e2793–e2802 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Huber, E. et al. Dorsal and ventral horn atrophy is associated with clinical outcome after spinal cord injury. Neurology90, e1510–e1522 (2018). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Pfyffer, D., Huber, E., Sutter, R., Curt, A. & Freund, P. Tissue bridges predict recovery after traumatic and ischemic thoracic spinal cord injury. Neurology93, e1550–e1560 (2019). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Talbott, J. F. et al. The Brain and Spinal Injury Center score: a novel, simple, and reproducible method for assessing the severity of acute cervical spinal cord injury with axial T2-weighted MRI findings. J. Neurosurg. Spine23, 495–504 (2015). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Wheeler-Kingshott, C. A. et al. The current state-of-the-art of spinal cord imaging: applications. Neuroimage84, 1082–1093 (2014). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Stroman, P. W. et al. The current state-of-the-art of spinal cord imaging: methods. Neuroimage84, 1070–1081 (2014). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Lang, B. T. et al. Modulation of the proteoglycan receptor PTPσ promotes recovery after spinal cord injury. Nature518, 404–408 (2015). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Blesch, A. & Tuszynski, M. H. Spinal cord injury: plasticity, regeneration and the challenge of translational drug development. Trends Neurosci.32, 41–47 (2009). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Filli, L. & Schwab, M. E. The rocky road to translation in spinal cord repair. Ann. Neurol.72, 491–501 (2012). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Freria, C. M. et al. Deletion of the fractalkine receptor, CX3CR1, improves endogenous repair, axon sprouting, and synaptogenesis after spinal cord injury in mice. J. Neurosci.37, 3568–3587 (2017). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Church, J. S., Kigerl, K. A., Lerch, J. K., Popovich, P. G. & McTigue, D. M. TLR4 deficiency impairs oligodendrocyte formation in the injured spinal cord. J. Neurosci.36, 6352–6364 (2016). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Hansen, C. N. et al. Elevated MMP-9 in the lumbar cord early after thoracic spinal cord injury impedes motor relearning in mice. J. Neurosci.33, 13101–13111 (2013). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Tanadini, L. G. et al. Identifying homogeneous subgroups in neurological disorders: unbiased recursive partitioning in cervical complete spinal cord injury. Neurorehabil. Neural Repair28, 507–515 (2014). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Ghasemlou, N., Kerr, B. J. & David, S. Tissue displacement and impact force are important contributors to outcome after spinal cord contusion injury. Exp. Neurol.196, 9–17 (2005). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Santos-Benito, F. F., Muñoz-Quiles, C. & Ramón-Cueto, A. Long-term care of paraplegic laboratory mammals. J. Neurotrauma23, 521–536 (2006). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kigerl, K. A., Mostacada, K. & Popovich, P. G. Gut microbiota are disease-modifying factors after traumatic spinal cord injury. Neurotherapeutics15, 60–67 (2018). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Kigerl, K. A., Zane, K., Adams, K., Sullivan, M. B. & Popovich, P. G. The spinal cord-gut-immune axis as a master regulator of health and neurological function after spinal cord injury. Exp. Neurol.323, 113085 (2020). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Levy, M., Kolodziejczyk, A. A., Thaiss, C. A. & Elinav, E. Dysbiosis and the immune system. Nat. Rev. Immunol.17, 219–232 (2017). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Berer, K. et al. Commensal microbiota and myelin autoantigen cooperate to trigger autoimmune demyelination. Nature479, 538–541 (2011). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Wiesel, T. N. & Hubel, D. H. Extent of recovery from the effects of visual deprivation in kittens. J. Neurophysiol.28, 1060–1072 (1965). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Raineteau, O. & Schwab, M. E. Plasticity of motor systems after incomplete spinal cord injury. Nat. Rev. Neurosci.2, 263–273 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
May, Z., Fouad, K., Shum-Siu, A. & Magnuson, D. S. Challenges of animal models in SCI research: Effects of pre-injury task-specific training in adult rats before lesion. Behav. Brain Res.291, 26–35 (2015). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Caudle, K. L. et al. Hindlimb immobilization in a wheelchair alters functional recovery following contusive spinal cord injury in the adult rat. Neurorehabil. Neural Repair25, 729–739 (2011). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Basso, D. M., Beattie, M. S. & Bresnahan, J. C. A sensitive and reliable locomotor rating scale for open field testing in rats. J. Neurotrauma12, 1–21 (1995). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kirshblum, S. C. et al. Patterns of sacral sparing components on neurologic recovery in newly injured persons with traumatic spinal cord injury. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.97, 1647–1655 (2016). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Courtine, G. et al. Can experiments in nonhuman primates expedite the translation of treatments for spinal cord injury in humans? Nat. Med.13, 561–566 (2007). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Farhadi, H. F. et al. Impact of admission imaging findings on neurological outcomes in acute cervical traumatic spinal cord injury. J. Neurotrauma35, 1398–1406 (2018). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Bradbury, E. J. & McMahon, S. B. Spinal cord repair strategies: why do they work? Nat. Rev. Neurosci.7, 644–653 (2006). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Page, S. J., Gauthier, L. V. & White, S. Size doesn’t matter: cortical stroke lesion volume is not associated with upper extremity motor impairment and function in mild, chronic hemiparesis. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil.94, 817–821 (2013). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Price, C. J., Hope, T. M. & Seghier, M. L. Ten problems and solutions when predicting individual outcome from lesion site after stroke. Neuroimage145, 200–208 (2017). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Rorden, C. & Karnath, H. O. Using human brain lesions to infer function: a relic from a past era in the fMRI age? Nat. Rev. Neurosci.5, 813–819 (2004). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Inoue, K., Madhyastha, T., Rudrauf, D., Mehta, S. & Grabowski, T. What affects detectability of lesion-deficit relationships in lesion studies? Neuroimage Clin.6, 388–397 (2014). ArticlePubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Barkhof, F. The clinico-radiological paradox in multiple sclerosis revisited. Curr. Opin. Neurol.15, 239–245 (2002). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar
Barkhof, F. MRI in multiple sclerosis: correlation with expanded disability status scale (EDSS). Mult. Scler.5, 283–286 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Okuda, D. T. et al. Incidental MRI anomalies suggestive of multiple sclerosis: the radiologically isolated syndrome. Neurology72, 800–805 (2009). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Wuerfel, J. et al. Mouse model mimics multiple sclerosis in the clinico-radiological paradox. Eur. J. Neurosci.26, 190–198 (2007). ArticlePubMed Google Scholar