In a single-blind, Phase I clinical trial, we aimed to test the feasibility and safety of transplantation of autologous olfactory ensheathing cells into the spinal cord of three humans with complete spinal cord injury. This paper describes the trial and the surgical procedures and presents twelve month safety data.
Olfactory ensheathing cells were harvested from each subject in the surgery group, grown and purified All patients are tested on enrollment and then at regular intervals up to three years by a group of assessors who are blinded to the treatment or control group status. These assessments include physical, radiological, neurophysiological and psychosocial parameters.
This is the first reported trial of OEC’s in human spinal cord injury. Twelve-month data in a small cohort shows that there is no evidence of adverse events that would preclude completion of the current trial and the development of efficacy trials.
A knowledge of bacteriological profiles in previously treated cases is helpful as a guide to management of infected joint replacements, especially in those cases where bacteriology results are not available. The object of this study was to assess the changing trends of the bacteriology of infected total knee replacements (TKR) over 2 decades. The records of 79 patients undergoing revision for infected TKR between 1979 and 1999 were reviewed. There were 30 males and 49 females, average age 63 years, range 36 – 82 years. The types and sensitivities of bacteria identified, and the use of prophylactic systematic and cement antibiotics, was recorded. The Chi-squared test was used to test statistical significance. 70 organisms were identified in 62 patients: 29 Staphylococcus aureus; 27 Coagulase Negative Staphylococci (CNS); 8 Streptococci; 6 Coliforms. In the 1980s S. aureus accounted for 55% of infections, CNS 25%. In the 1990s S. aureus 38%, CNS 41%. Following the use of systematic antibiotics (3 x cefuroxime) or antibiotic cement (bacitracin/erythromycin/colistin – BEC) at primary TKR, fewer CNS infections were seen (p<
0. 05). There was only 1 case of methicillin resistant S. aureus. Coagulase negative staphylococci had a 36% resistance to flucloxacillin. With BEC cement there was a tendency to increased erythromycin resistance in CNS, but this did not achieve statistical significance. At revision for infected TKR, different bacterial profiles were observed depending on prophylactic antibiotic usage. As CNS now causes >
40% of infections, patients undergoing revision TKR should have antibiotics effective against CNS until definitive results are available.