4.7 Article

Spinal cord injury-induced immune deficiency syndrome enhances infection susceptibility dependent on lesion level

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 692-707

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awv375

Keywords

neuroinflammation; myelopathy; spinal cord injury; rehabilitation; mechanisms

Funding

  1. German Research Council (DFG
  2. Cluster of Excellence NeuroCure) [PR 1274/2-1]
  3. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) [D/10/43923]
  4. Wings for Life Spinal Cord Research Foundation [WfL-DE-006/1]
  5. W.E Hunt and C.M. Miller Endowment
  6. Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes [186392]
  7. National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR), U.S. Department of Education, USA [H133A110002]

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Infections are the main cause of death after spinal cord injury (SCI). Brommer et al. reveal that an SCI-induced immune deficiency syndrome is responsible for the enhanced infection susceptibility in SCI patients and a mouse model. Lesion level determines the extent of this 'immune paralysis'.Infections are the main cause of death after spinal cord injury (SCI). Brommer et al. reveal that an SCI-induced immune deficiency syndrome is responsible for the enhanced infection susceptibility in SCI patients and a mouse model. Lesion level determines the extent of this 'immune paralysis'.Pneumonia is the leading cause of death after acute spinal cord injury and is associated with poor neurological outcome. In contrast to the current understanding, attributing enhanced infection susceptibility solely to the patient's environment and motor dysfunction, we investigate whether a secondary functional neurogenic immune deficiency (spinal cord injury-induced immune deficiency syndrome, SCI-IDS) may account for the enhanced infection susceptibility. We applied a clinically relevant model of experimental induced pneumonia to investigate whether the systemic SCI-IDS is functional sufficient to cause pneumonia dependent on spinal cord injury lesion level and investigated whether findings are mirrored in a large prospective cohort study after human spinal cord injury. In a mouse model of inducible pneumonia, high thoracic lesions that interrupt sympathetic innervation to major immune organs, but not low thoracic lesions, significantly increased bacterial load in lungs. The ability to clear the bacterial load from the lung remained preserved in sham animals. Propagated immune susceptibility depended on injury of central pre-ganglionic but not peripheral postganglionic sympathetic innervation to the spleen. Thoracic spinal cord injury level was confirmed as an independent increased risk factor of pneumonia in patients after motor complete spinal cord injury (odds ratio = 1.35, P < 0.001) independently from mechanical ventilation and preserved sensory function by multiple regression analysis. We present evidence that spinal cord injury directly causes increased risk for bacterial infection in mice as well as in patients. Besides obvious motor and sensory paralysis, spinal cord injury also induces a functional SCI-IDS ('immune paralysis'), sufficient to propagate clinically relevant infection in an injury level dependent manner.

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