4.7 Article

Treatment of stroke in rat with intracarotid administration of marrow stromal cells

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 12, Pages 1666-1672

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.56.12.1666

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS35504, P01 NS23393] Funding Source: Medline

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Objective: To measure the therapeutic efficacy for the treatment of stroke with intra-arterial administration of bone marrow stromal cells (MSC). Background: MSC have characteristics of stem and progenitor cells. The hypothesis that MSC injected into the internal carotid artery after stroke enter into ischemic brain and improve neurologic recovery was tested. Methods: Twenty-five adult Wistar rats were subjected to transient (2-hour) middle cerebral artery occlusion alone (n = 9), or treated with intracarotid arterial injection of 200 muL phosphate-buffered saline (n = 8) or 2 x 10(6) MSC in 200 muL phosphate-buffered saline (n = 8) 1 day after ischemia. MSC were harvested and isolated from additional adult rats and then cultured and labeled with bromodeoxyuridine. Rats were subjected to neurologic functional tests (adhesive-removal, modified neurologic severity scores) before and at 1, 7, and 14 days after middle cerebral artery occlusion. Immunohistochemistry was used to identify cell-specific proteins of bromodeoxyuridine-reactive MSG. Results: Bromodeoxyuridine-reactive cells (similar to 21% of 2 x 106 injected MSG) distributed throughout the territory of the middle cerebral artery by 14 days after ischemia. Some bromodeoxyuridine-reactive cells expressed proteins characteristic of astrocytes and neurons. Rats with intra-arterial transplantation of MSC exhibited improvement on the adhesive-removal test (p < 0.05) and the modified neurologic severity scores (p < 0.05) at 14 days compared with controls. Conclusions: MSC injected intra-arterially are localized and directed to the territory of the middle cerebral artery, and these cells foster functional improvement after cerebral ischemia.

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