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Exercise combined with administration of adipose-derived stem cells ameliorates neuropathic pain after spinal cord injury

Xing Cheng, Guping Mao, Wenjie Hu, Zhengran Yu, Yiyang Xu, Wei Chen, Xiang Li, Xiaolin Zeng, Wenwu Zhang, Jiewen Chen, Yong Wan, Le Wang

2022Neural Regeneration Research11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ADSCs were transplanted into the T11 spinal cord lesion site immediately after SCI. Motor function and neuropathic pain-related behaviors were assessed weekly using the Basso Mouse Scale, von Frey filament test, Hargreaves method, and cold plate test. Histological studies (Eriochrome cyanine staining and immunohistochemistry) were performed at the end of the experiment (28 days post-injury). Exercise combined with administration of ADSCs partially improved early motor function (7, 14, and 21 days post-injury), mechanical allodynia, mechanical hypoalgesia, thermal hyperalgesia, and thermal hypoalgesia. Administration of ADSCs reduced white and gray matter loss at the lesion site. In addition, fewer microglia and astrocytes (as identified by expression of ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 and glial fibrillary acidic protein, respectively) were present in the lumbar dorsal horn in the SCI + ADSCs and SCI + exercise + ADSCs groups compared with the sham group. Our findings suggest that exercise combined with administration of ADSCs is beneficial for the early recovery of motor function and could partially ameliorate SCI-induced neuropathic pain.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNeuropathic painSpinal cord injuryHypoalgesiaGlial fibrillary acidic proteinLesionGlial scarAllodyniaSpinal cordAnesthesiaPathologyInternal medicineHyperalgesiaNociceptionImmunohistochemistryPsychiatryReceptorSpinal Cord Injury ResearchPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsNerve injury and regeneration
Exercise combined with administration of adipose-derived stem cells ameliorates neuropathic pain after spinal cord injury | Litcius