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Protracted Morphological Changes in the Corticospinal Tract Within the Cervical Spinal Cord After Intracerebral Hemorrhage in the Right Striatum of Mice

Anson Cho Kiu Ng, Min Yao, Stephen Yin Cheng, Jing Li, Jian‐Dong Huang, Wutian Wu, Gkk Leung, Haitao Sun

2020Frontiers in Neuroscience26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with high morbidity and mortality rates. Currently, there is no promising treatment that improves prognosis significantly. While a thorough investigation of the pathological process within the primary site of injury in the brain has been conducted by the research field, the focus was mainly on gray matter injury, which partly accounted for the failure of discovery of clinically efficacious treatments. It is not until recent years that white matter (WM) injury in the brain after subcortical ICH was examined. As WM tracts form networks between different regions, damage to fibers should impair brain connectivity, resulting in functional impairment. Although WM changes have been demonstrated in the brain after ICH, alterations distant from the initial injury site down in the spinal cord are unclear. This longitudinal study, for the first time, revealed prolonged morphological changes of the contralesional dorsal corticospinal tract (CST) in the spinal cord 5 weeks after experimental ICH in mice by confocal microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, implying that the structural integrity of the CST was compromised extensively after ICH. Given the important role of CST in motor function, future translational studies targeting motor recovery should delineate the treatment effects on CST integrity.

Topics & Concepts

Corticospinal tractMedicineSpinal cordIntracerebral hemorrhageWhite matterSpinal cord injuryNeurosciencePyramidal tractsAnesthesiaMagnetic resonance imagingAnatomyDiffusion MRIPsychologyRadiologyPsychiatrySubarachnoid hemorrhageIntracerebral and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage ResearchAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and ApplicationsSpinal Cord Injury Research
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