header advert
Results 1 - 4 of 4
Results per page:
Applied filters
Content I can access

Include Proceedings
Dates
Year From

Year To
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 54 - 54
1 Apr 2013
Cheng TL Valchev P Dehghani F Little DG Schindeler A
Full Access

Introduction

Bone tissue engineering approaches are an emerging strategy to treat bone defects, and commonly involve the delivery of osteogenic cells and/or drugs via a porous scaffold. We have been exploring an alternative injectable approach for drug delivery that would obviate the need for invasive surgery.

Hypothesis

Sucrose Acetate Isobutyrate (SAIB) is a sucrose-based ester that is a highly viscous semi-solid. Diluting SAIB with 10–20% ethanol markedly reduces its viscosity, with ethanol diffusing rapidly after in vivo injection. This phase transitioning property makes SAIB an ideal candidate for bone tissue engineering.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 361 - 361
1 Jul 2011
Stavridis S Hailer N Dehghani F Korf H Christodoulou A
Full Access

The aim of this experimental study was to provide an in vitro model suitable for the investigation of the complex interactions of neurons with non-neuronal cells that take place throughout the degenerative and regenerative processes induced by spinal cord injury.

Organotypic spinal cord slice cultures (OSCSC) were prepared from postnatal Wistar rats (p0–12), were sustained in vitro up to 12 days and characterized by immunohistochemistry by well-established markers such as NeuN, Calbindin, GFAP, IB4 and Nestin.

Calbindin+ neurons, distributed across the entire gray matter, were visible also after longer culture periods. NeuN+ neurons were best preserved in the dorsal horn, whereas large NeuN+ and ChAT+ motoneurons in the ventral horn vanished after 3 days in vitro. GFAP+ astro-cytes, initially restricted to the white matter, invaded the gray matter of OSCSC early during the culture period. Microglial cells, stained by Griffonia simplicifolia isolectin B4, were rapidly activated in the dorsal tract and in the gray matter, but declined in number with time. Nestin-immunoreactivity was found in animals of all age groups, either in cells interspersed in the ependymal lining around the central canal, or in cells resembling protoplasmic astrocytes. OSCSC derived from p0 or p3 animals showed a better preservation of the cytoarchitecture than cultures derived from older animals.

In summary, OSCSC contain defined neuronal populations, the cytoarchitecture is partially preserved, and the glial reaction is self-limited. Our model of OSCSC could prove useful in future experiments on the patho-physiology of spinal cord injury


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 361 - 362
1 Jul 2011
Stavridis S Hailer N Dehghani F Korf H Christodoulou A
Full Access

Aim of this experimental study was to develop an in vitro model that simplifies the study of various factors regulating neuronal regeneration.

An in vitro-system that allows co-culture of slices from rat motorcortex and spinal cord (p4) was established. Two groups of cultures were investigated: In the first group, intact spinal cord slices were cultured adjacent to motorcortex slices, while in the second group the spinal cord slices were sagitally cut into halves, with the sectioned interface placed directly adjacent to the motorcortex, in order to prevent the spinal white matter from interference. Each group was further divided into two subgroups: The NT-3 group, where the culture medium contained 50 ng/ml NT-3 and the control group treated with normal culture medium. Motorcortex pyramidal neurons were anterogradely labelled with MiniRuby, a 10 kD biotinylated dextran amine.

After 4 days the co-cultures were propagated, and axonal sprouting occurred. The group of co-cultures treated with NT-3 showed an improved cortical cytoarchitecture, and sprouting axons were more frequently observed. In NT-3-treated co-cultures where spinal cord gray matter was directly opposed to cortical slices sprouting axons entered the adjacent spinal cord tissue. This phenomenon was not observed if spinal white matter was opposed to the cortical slices, or if NT-3 was absent.

Our data suggest that the absence of repellent factors such as white matter and the presence of neuro-trophic factors promote axonal sprouting. Co-cultures of motorcortex and spinal cord slices combined with anterograde axonal labelling could provide a valuable in vitro model for the simplified screening of factors influencing corticospinal tract regeneration


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 142 - 142
1 Mar 2006
Hailer N Voigt C Dehghani F
Full Access

Aims: Spinal fractures cause compression of the spinal cord, and nerve cells and nerve fibers are severely damaged. The immediate mechanical injury is subsequently enhanced in a process called secondary damage, and it has been proposed that inflammatory cells such as microglial cells and cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-1 damage nerves and nerve fibers that were initially not affected by spinal cord compression. It was the aim of this study a) to investigate the role of microglial cells and IL-1 in neuronal damage, and b) to investigate whether the anti-inflammatory agent IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) that has been successfully used in patients with polyarthritis can protect neurons by inhibiting microglial activation or by antagonising cellular effects of IL-1.

Methods: We investigated the effects of IL-1 and IL-1ra on neurons and microglial cells in organotypic hippocampal slice cultures (OHSC): OHSC derived from rats were excitotoxically lesioned after 6 days in vitro by application of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) and treated with (IL)-1 (6 ng/ml) or IL-1ra (40, 100, or 500 ng/ml) for up to 10 days. OHSC were then quantitatively analyzed by confocal laser scanning microscopy after fluorescent labeling of neurons and microglial cells.

Results: Treatment of unlesioned OHSC with IL-1 did not induce neuronal damage although the number of microglial cells increased. NMDA-lesioning alone resulted in a massive increase in the number of microglial cells and degenerating neurons. Treatment of NMDA-lesioned OHSC with IL-1 exacerbated neuronal cell death and further enhanced microglial cell numbers. Treatment of NMDA-lesioned cultures with IL-1ra significantly attenuated NMDA-induced neuronal damage and reduced the number of microglial cells, whereas application of IL-1ra in unlesioned OHSC did not induce significant changes in either cell population.

Conclusion: Our findings indicate that a) IL-1 directly affects neurons and acts independently from infiltrating hematogenous cells, b) IL-1 induces microglial activation although it is not neurotoxic per se, c) IL-1 enhances excitotoxic neuronal damage and microglial activation, d) IL-1ra, even when only applied for short periods of time, reduces neuronal cell death and induces a dose-dependent decrease in the number of microglial cells after excitotoxic damage. These findings suggest that IL-1ra has the potential to exert beneficial effects in patients with spinal fractures, and this encourages further in vivo-studies.