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find Author "LI Jiayin" 2 results
  • Review of the regeneration mechanism of complete spinal cord injury

    Spinal cord injury (SCI), especially the complete SCI, usually results in complete paralysis below the level of the injury and seriously affects the patient’s quality of life. SCI repair is still a worldwide medical problem. In the last twenty years, Professor DAI Jianwu and his team pioneered complete SCI model by removing spinal tissue with varied lengths in rodents, canine, and non-human primates to verify therapeutic effect of different repair strategies. Moreover, they also started the first clinical study of functional collagen scaffold on patients with acute complete SCI on January 16th, 2015. This review mainly focusses on the possible mechanisms responsible for complete SCI. In common, recovery of some sensory and motor functions post complete SCI include the following three contributing reasons. ① Regeneration of long ascending and descending axons throughout the lesion site to re-connect the original targets; ② New neural circuits formed in the lesion site by newly generated neurons post injury, which effectively re-connect the transected stumps; ③ The combined effect of ① and ②. The numerous studies have confirmed that neural circuits rebuilt across the injury site by newborn neurons might be the main mechanisms for functional recovery of animals from rodents to dogs. In many SCI model, especially the complete spinal cord transection model, many studies have convincingly demonstrated that the quantity and length of regenerated long descending axons, particularly like CST fibers, are too few to across the lesion site that is millimeters in length to realize motor functional recovery. Hence, it is more feasible in guiding neuronal relays formation by bio-scaffolds implantation than directing long motor axons regeneration in improving motor function of animals with complete spinal cord transection. However, some other issues such as promoting more neuronal relays formation, debugging wrong connections, and maintaining adequate neural circuits for functional recovery are urgent problems to be addressed.

    Release date:2018-05-30 04:28 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • The role of glial scar on axonal regeneration after spinal cord injury

    The ‘glial scar’ has been widely studied in the regeneration of spinal cord injury (SCI). For decades, mainstream scientific concept considers glial scar as a ‘physical barrier’ to impede axonal regeneration after SCI. Moreover, some extracellular molecules produced by glial scar are also regarded as axonal growth inhibitors. With the development of technology and the progress of research, multiple lines of new evidence challenge the pre-existing traditional notions in SCI repair, including the role of glial scar. This review briefly reviewed the history, advance, and controversy of glial scar research in SCI repair since 1930s, hoping to recognize the roles of glial scar and crack the international problem of SCI regeneration.

    Release date:2018-07-30 05:33 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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