Does recovery occur after spinal cord injury? | Answers …
By NEVAGiles23
Many doctors tell patients and families that recovery does not occur after spinal cord injury. This is not true. Recovery is the rule, not the exception after spinal cord injury.
Segmental recovery. Most patients recover 1-2 segments below the injury site, even after so-called complete spinal cord injuries. For example, a person with a C4/5 injury may have deltoid function on admission and then recover biceps (C5), wrist extensors (C6), and perhaps even triceps (C7) after several months, and the associated dermatomes.
Recovery due to methylprednisolone. The second National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study (NASCIS 2) showed that patients with complete spinal cord injuries and who did not receive the high-dose steroid methylprednisolone recovered on average 8% of motor function they had lost. If they received methylprednisolone within 8 hours after injury, they recovered on average 21% of what they had lost. In contrast, people with incomplete spinal cord injury recovered on average 59% of motor function and 75% if treated with high dose methylprednisolone.
Recovery of postural reflexes. Most people with cervical or upper thoracic spinal cord injury are initially unable to control their trunk muscles. However, most will recover better trunk control over months or even years after injury.
Walking quads and paras. Most people with incomplete spinal cord injuries, i.e. ASIA C, will recover standing or walking. Walking recovery after complete spinal cord injuries, i.e. ASIA A, are rare but can occur in 5% of the cases. In the 1980s, less than 40% of spinal cord injuries admitted to hospital were incomplete. However, in the 1990s, over 60% of spinal cord injuries are incomplete and thus the incidence of walking quads or walking paras may be higher than most people think.
Both animal and human studies indicate that as little as 10% of spinal cord tracts can support substantial function, including locomotion. People often can walk even though a tumor has damaged 90% of their spinal cord. This is due to the redundancy and plasticity of the spinal cord. Multiple spinal pathways serve similar or overlapping functions. Plasticity refers to the ability of axons to sprout and make new connections. Because transected spinal cords are rare, most people have some spinal axons crossing the injury site. This is the basis of the hope that even slight regeneration of the spinal cord will restore substantial function.
Experimental Therapies for Subacute Spinal Cord Injury
Several experimental therapies are being tested in clinical trial for spinal cord injury during the first days or weeks after injury.
Monosialic ganglioside (GM1, Sygen). In 1991, Fred Geisler and colleagues reported that GM1 injected daily for 6 weeks after injury improve locomotor recovery 37 patients. Fidia Pharmaceutical subsequently tested this therapy in a large multicenter clinical trial in 800 patients, showing that the GM1 accelerated recovery during the first six weeks but did not significantly improve the extent of recovery at 6-12 months after injury. Note that this trial is no longer active. Although the drug is still available in Europe and South America, the company Fidia has been bought by another company. CareCure Forum (GM1) Link
Activated macrophage transplants. In 1998, Michal Schwartz at the Weizmann Institute reported that activated macrophages obtained from blood and transplanted to the spinal cord improve functional recovery in rats. The company Proneuron initiated phase 1 clinical trials to assess feasibility and safety of macrophage transplants in human spinal cord injury. Preliminary reports suggest that the treatment is feasible and safe. All the patients had complete thoracic spinal cord injury and received macrophage transplants within 2 weeks after injury. Three of the 8 patients recovered from ASIA A to ASIA C, more than the expected 5%. A phase 1 clinical trial is continuing at Erasmus Hospital in Brussels, Belgium. A phase 2 trial is being planned in two U.S. centers including Craig Hospital in Denver (CO) and Mt. Sinai in New York City (NY). CareCure Forum (Macrophage) Link
Alternating Current Electrical Stimulation. In 1999, Richard Borgens and colleagues at Purdue University reported that alternating currents applied to dog spinal cords stimulated regeneration and recovery of function in dogs with spinal cord injury. A clinical trial has commenced at Purdue University for people who are within 2 weeks after acute spinal cord injury. CareCure Forum (AC Stim) Link
AIT-082 (Neotrofin). This is a guanosine analog that can be taken orally and reportedly increases neurotrophins or neural growth factors in the brain and spinal cord. Neotherapeutics tested this drug in patients with Alzheimers disease. They started a multicenter clinical trial at Ranchos Los Amigos in Downey (CA), Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford (CT), and Thomas Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia. The treatment must be started within 2 weeks after spinal cord injury. CareCure Forum (AIT-082) Link
Experimental Therapies for Chronic Spinal Cord Injury
Several therapies are being tested in clinical trials for chronic spinal cord injury, i.e. people whose neurological recovery has stabilized one or more years after injury. Many other treatments are being considered for clinical trial (see article on Advances in Spinal Cord Injury Therapy 25 November 2002).
4-aminopyridine (4-AP). This drug is a small molecule that blocks fast voltage sensitive potassium channel blockers. The drug can be obtained by physician prescription from compounding pharmacies in the United States. In addition, Acorda Therapeutics is carrying out a multicenter phase 3 clinical trial of a sustained release formulation of the drug in people who are more than one and a half years after incomplete spinal cord injury. The drug may improve conduction of demyelinated axons in the spinal cord and preliminary clinical trial results suggest that the drug may reduce spasticity and improve motor or sensory function in as many as a third of people with chronic spinal cord injury. See CareCure Forum (4-AP) Link
Fetal porcine stem cell transplants. Embryonic stem cells have attracted much attention. Several studies of human fetal cell transplants have been carried out in Sweden, Russia, and the United States, showing that transplanted fetal cells will engraft in human spinal cords. However, due in part of the lack of availability of adult human stem cells for transplantation and politics associated with the use of embryonic human stem cells, the first and only stem cell therapy trial for spinal cord injury in the United States used fetal stem cells from pigs. A phase 1 clinical trial at Washington University in St. Louis (MO) and Albany Medical Center in Albany (NY) has transplanted fetal stem obtained from pig fetuses and treated with antibodies to reduce the immune rejection. Sponsored by Diacrin, this trial is aiming to test 10 patients. See CareCure Forum (Diacrin) Link
Olfactory ensheathing glial transplants. Olfactory ensheathing glia (OEG) reside in the olfactory nerve and the olfactory bulb. They are believed to be why the olfactory nerve continuously regenerates in adults. OEG cells are made in the nasal mucosa and migrate up the nerve to the olfactory bulb. Several laboratories have shown that OEG transplants facilitate regeneration of the spinal cord. Three clinical trials have started in Lisbon (Portugal), Brisbane (Australia), and Beijing (China). In Lisbon, they are transplanting nasal mucosa obtained from the patient into the spinal cord. In Brisbane, they are culturing OEG cells from nasal mucosa and transplanting the cells to the spinal cord. In Beijing, they are culturing OEG from human fetal olfactory bulbs and transplanting into the spinal cord. See CareCure Forum Link (Brisbane) and CareCure Forum Link (Beijing)
Summary
Spinal cord injury is devastating, not only for the injured person but for families and friends. While much information is available on Internet, most of the material is scattered and out of date. This article summarizes answers to some of the most frequently asked questions by people who are encountering spinal cord injury for the first time. Spinal cord injury disconnects the brain from the body. This leads not only to loss of sensation and motor control below the injury site but may be associated with abnormal activities of the spinal cord both above and below the injury site, resulting in spasticity, neuropathic pain, and autonomic dysreflexia. Many functions of our body that we take for granted, such as going to the bathroom, sexual function, blood pressure and heart rate, digestion, temperature control and sweating, and other autonomic functions may not only be lost but may be abnormally active. Finally, contrary to popular notions about spinal cord injury, recovery is the rule and not the exception in spinal cord injury. The recovery takes a long time and may be slowed down or blocked by the muscle atrophy and learned non-use. Finally, there is hope. Many therapies have been shown to regenerate and remyelinate the spinal cord. Some of these are now in clinical trials and many more should be in clinical trial soon.
Recovery and TreatmentWise Young, MD, PhD
See the original post:
Does recovery occur after spinal cord injury? | Answers ...
- Much-anticipated human trial aiming to repair spinal cord damage about to begin - ABC News - October 21st, 2024
- The Science Of Health: Are Spinal Cord Injuries Irreversible? Know Science Advances That Can Cure Them In The Future - ABP Live - October 16th, 2023
- Evaluating the Growth Prospects of the Global Nerve Repair & Regeneration Market at a CAGR of 6.5% | Emergen - EIN News - April 21st, 2023
- Regenerative Therapies Market is Set to Grow at a CAGR of 8.7% by 2033, Propelled by Advancements in - EIN News - March 17th, 2023
- Kadimastem Submits IND Application to the FDA for its Phase IIa Clinical Trial with AstroRx for the Treatment of ALS - Marketscreener.com - February 21st, 2023
- My Back Is All F*cked Up 55-Year-Old Joe Rogan Curses at Worst Jiu-Jitsu for Painful Health Condition - EssentiallySports - February 21st, 2023
- Brain and Spinal Cord Tumors: Hope Through Research - January 3rd, 2023
- 14.3 The Brain and Spinal Cord Anatomy & Physiology - January 3rd, 2023
- Stem Cell Therapy for Spinal Cord Injury - PubMed - January 3rd, 2023
- Spinal cord injury - Diagnosis and treatment - Mayo Clinic - December 25th, 2022
- Spinal Cord Injury: Hope Through Research | National Institute of ... - December 1st, 2022
- Stem cell controversy - Wikipedia - October 13th, 2022
- Stem Cells Australia | Australian research, stem cell treatments and ... - October 13th, 2022
- The eye and stem cells: the path to treating blindness - October 13th, 2022
- World's first stem cell treatment for spina bifida delivered during fetal surgery - UC Davis Health - October 13th, 2022
- Fighting One Disease or Condition per Day - Daily Kos - October 13th, 2022
- UPDATE: NurExone Signs Letter of Intent with Nanometrix for Its Exosome and Cargo Molecular Profiling AI-Driven Technology - Yahoo Finance - October 13th, 2022
- Global Cell Therapy Market Report (2022 to 2028) - Featuring Thermo Fisher Scientific, MaxCyte, Danaher and Avantor Among Others -... - October 13th, 2022
- Horizon Therapeutics plc Announces New UPLIZNA (inebilizumab-cdon) Data in Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder (NMOSD) to be presented at ECTRIMS... - October 13th, 2022
- Physiology, Spinal Cord - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - October 5th, 2022
- IMAC Holdings, Inc. Announces Completion of Third Cohort of its Phase 1 ... - October 5th, 2022
- Revolutionary Jab that Could Repair Spinal Cord Injuries Developed by Scientists - Good News Network - October 5th, 2022
- How the 'Love Hormone' Oxytocin May Help Heal Heart Muscles - Healthline - October 5th, 2022
- Unlocking the Mysteries of Brain Regeneration Groundbreaking Study Offers New Insight - SciTechDaily - October 5th, 2022
- In Conversation: How to understand chronic pain - Medical News Today - October 5th, 2022
- New drug could cure aggressive brain cancer stopping tumours in their tracks... - The US Sun - September 27th, 2022
- Rehabilitating spinal cord injury and stroke with graphene and gaming - Nanowerk - September 19th, 2022
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market Reaches at a CAGR of 8.0% in the Forecast Periods [2021-2031] - BioSpace - September 19th, 2022
- Axolotls can regenerate their brains - Big Think - September 19th, 2022
- IMAC Holdings, Inc. Announces Completion of Third Cohort of its Phase 1 Clinical Study of Umbilical Cord-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for the... - September 11th, 2022
- Spinal Muscular Atrophy: Causes and importance of early diagnosis for proactive management - Firstpost - September 11th, 2022
- Increasing Road Accidents and Fall Injuries among Aged Population Primarily Driving Need for Orthopedic Navigation Systems: Fact.MR Analysis - Yahoo... - September 3rd, 2022
- Culture of human nasal olfactory stem cells and their extracellular vesicles as advanced therapy medicinal products - Newswise - August 10th, 2022
- Curious kids: what is inside teeth? - The Conversation - August 10th, 2022
- Human placental mesenchymal stem cells derived exosomes improved functional recovery via attenuating apoptosis and increasing axonal regeneration... - August 2nd, 2022
- How the Regenerative Properties of Glioblastoma Can Be Terminated - Gilmore Health News - August 2nd, 2022
- New TSXV listing looks to address the $3B spinal cord injury treatment market (NRX.V) - FXStreet - July 25th, 2022
- Human iPSC co-culture model to investigate the interaction between microglia and motor neurons | Scientific Reports - Nature.com - July 25th, 2022
- Negligence in treatment of diseases like glioblastoma can be fatal, seminar told - The News International - July 25th, 2022
- What lab-grown cerebral organoids are revealing about the brain - New Scientist - July 25th, 2022
- Innovative Therapies, Care Equity Highlight 2022 ASCO Annual Meeting - Targeted Oncology - July 16th, 2022
- Global Stem Cell Manufacturing Market Value Projected To Reach USD 21.71 Billion By 2029, Registering A CAGR Of 9.1% - Digital Journal - July 16th, 2022
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Is Expected To Reach USD 455.61 Billion By 2027 At A CAGR Of 16 percent By Forecast 2027 Says Maximize Market Research (MMR)... - June 30th, 2022
- This startup wants you to have a personal stem cell stash - Freethink - June 30th, 2022
- Parents of 12-Year-Old Boy Praying for a Miracle, Appealing UK Judge's Decision to Remove Life Support - CBN.com - June 30th, 2022
- The end of Roe v. Wade affects more than just abortion - Vox.com - June 30th, 2022
- Horizon Therapeutics plc Submits Regulatory Filing for UPLIZNA (inebilizumab) in Brazil - Business Wire - June 20th, 2022
- Effect of Electrical Stimulation on Spinal Cord Injury: In Vitro and In Vivo Analysis - Newswise - June 11th, 2022
- First-of-its-Kind Stem Cell and Gene Therapy Highlighted at Annual Stem Cell Meeting - Newswise - June 11th, 2022
- UK Judge to Decide if 12-Year-Old Will Be Removed from Life Support, Parents Beg for More Time to Heal - CBN.com - June 11th, 2022
- 'This is my life, and I'll try anything to save it': Woman with MS raising funds for treatment - The Brandon Sun - May 29th, 2022
- Racing Thoughts: Quadriplegic Man Drives Race Car With His Brain - Newsy - May 29th, 2022
- Physical therapy for vertigo: Exercises, benefits, and more - Medical News Today - May 29th, 2022
- Researchers find new function performed by almost half of brain cells - Medical News Today - May 13th, 2022
- Texas Family Fights to Access $2.1 Million Treatment for Baby - NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth - May 13th, 2022
- Severe COVID-19 may cause cognitive deficits equivalent to 20 years of aging - Medical News Today - May 13th, 2022
- Stem Cell Magic: 5 Promising Treatments For Major Medical Conditions - Study Finds - April 29th, 2022
- Neural Stem Cell Therapy For Spinal Cord Injury To Tap Into The Potential Of Stem Cells - Optic Flux - April 15th, 2022
- Still Blooming: Sams mission to raise money for spinal cord injury research - 7NEWS - April 15th, 2022
- Lineage and Cancer Research UK Announce Completion of Patient Enrollment in Phase 1 Clinical Study of VAC2 for the Treatment of Non-small Cell Lung... - April 15th, 2022
- Lineage Announces Pipeline Expansion to Include Auditory Neuronal Cell Therapy for Treatment of Hearing Loss - Galveston County Daily News - March 22nd, 2022
- COVID-19: Even mild to moderate infection may cause brain anomalies - Medical News Today - March 22nd, 2022
- Scots mum with MS says 50k treatment abroad is 'last hope' of halting disease - Daily Record - January 18th, 2022
- Mending the gap: U of T's Molly Shoichet joins team developing new treatments for spinal cord injuries - News@UofT - January 18th, 2022
- Spinal Cord Injury Information Page | National Institute ... - January 3rd, 2022
- Dancing molecules successfully repair severe spinal cord ... - January 3rd, 2022
- Best 2021 Medical Breakthroughs And Treatments to Beat Cancer, Alzheimer's, Diabetes & More - Good News Network - January 3rd, 2022
- Global Regenerative Medicine Market is Expected to Reach USD 57.08 Billion by 2027, Growing at a CAGR of 11.27% Over the Forecast Period. -... - December 23rd, 2021
- Scientists unravel a gene function that helps the genesis of neurons - Research Matters - December 23rd, 2021
- The 10 Most Compelling Research Stories of 2021 PharmaLive - PharmaLive - December 23rd, 2021
- 2021: The year in review | YaleNews - Yale News - December 23rd, 2021
- Polymyositis Pipeline to Progress with New and Emerging Drugs for Treatment, Analyzes DelveInsight - GlobeNewswire - December 10th, 2021
- Cell and Gene Therapy Market to reach US$ 47,095.2 Mn by end of 2028, Says Coherent Market Insights - PRNewswire - November 22nd, 2021
- From asthma to cancer to infertility, the new treatments, jabs and meds making us healthier... - The Sun - November 22nd, 2021
- Improving motor neuron-like cell differentiation of hEnSCs by the combination of epothilone B loaded PCL microspheres in optimized 3D collagen... - November 8th, 2021
- Akiko Nishiyama Explains the Many Strengths of a Degree in Physiology and Neurobiology - UConn Today - UConn Today - October 28th, 2021
- Team finds way to enhance stem cell therapy for CNS injuries - BioPharma-Reporter.com - October 28th, 2021
- 'Rogue' antibodies found in brains of teens with delusions and paranoia after COVID-19 - Livescience.com - October 28th, 2021
- Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: An Overview of ... - October 16th, 2021
- Role of Stem Cells in Treatment of Neurological Disorder - October 16th, 2021