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Combination of dexamethasone and etanercept reduces secondary damage in experimental spinal cord trauma

Authors :
Genovese, Tiziana
Mazzon, E
Crisafulli, Concetta
Esposito, Emanuela
DI PAOLA, R
Muia, C
DI BELLA, P
Meli, R
Bramanti, Placido
Cuzzocrea, Salvatore
DI PAOLA, Rosanna
T., Genovese
E., Mazzon
C., Crisafulli
Esposito, Emanuela
R., DI PAOLA
C., Miua
P., DI BELLA
Meli, Rosaria
P., Bramanti
S., Cuzzocrea
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The aim of our study was to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of combination therapy with etanercept and dexamethasone (DEX) in vivo in experimental murine model of spinal cord trauma, which was induced by the application of vascular clips (force of 24 g) to the dura via a four-level T5–T8 laminectomy. Spinal cord injury in mice resulted in severe trauma characterized by edema, neutrophil infiltration, and cytokine production followed by recruitment of other inflammatory cells, production of inflammation mediators, tissue damage, apoptosis and disease. Treatment of the mice with etanercept (1.25 mg/kg) and DEX (0.025 mg/kg) when administered as a combination therapy but not as a single treatment significantly reduced the degree of (1) spinal cord inflammation and tissue injury (histological score), (2) infiltration of neutrophils (MPO evaluation), (3) inducible nitric oxide synthase, nitrotyrosine, and cytokines expression (tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-1β), (4) and apoptosis (Terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated UTP end labeling staining, Fas-ligand expression and Bax and Bcl-2 expression). In a separate set of experiments we have also clearly demonstrated that the combination therapy significantly ameliorated the recovery of limb function (evaluated by motor recovery score). Taken together, our results clearly demonstrate for the first time that strategies targeting multiple proinflammatory pathways may be more effective than a single effector molecule for the treatment of spinal cord trauma.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d21f7f0aa05d704d13a2fec8c21fa309