In order to provide a scientific basis for possible therapeutic approach to human spinal cord injury, animal (rat) trials with multiple classifications of agents will be continued during the year, including calcium entry blockers, steroids, hyperbaric oxygen, and antioxidants. In addition, therapeutic trials with phosphate and other buffers will be continued. Therapeutic trials will, at the same time, test various hypotheses concerning primary and secondary injury factors in the production of necrosis following traumatic injury. These include calcium toxicity, ischemia and free radical injury. Lactic acid myelopathy in vivo developed during the last grant period will be evaluated to determine the extracellular pHs in the spinal cord required to produce myelopathic changes using pH electrodes and a chemical microsensor. Studies will be completed during the grant year that were initiated in the last year on secondary changes in the rat spinal cord following Wallerian degeneration and postmortem autolysis which are being compared with the primary traumatic events and are critical to the interpretation of the latter. Future studies are anticipated which will determine the role of calcium in these secondary events, which are present in the traumatized spinal cord. In addition, freeze-fracture membrane pathological evaluation of spinal cord trauma will be initiated.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01NS011066-15
Application #
3099349
Study Section
Neurological Disorders Program Project Review A Committee (NSPA)
Project Start
1977-02-01
Project End
1992-11-30
Budget Start
1988-12-01
Budget End
1989-11-30
Support Year
15
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Medical University of South Carolina
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
183710748
City
Charleston
State
SC
Country
United States
Zip Code
29425
Balentine, J D (1988) Spinal cord trauma: in search of the meaning of granular axoplasm and vesicular myelin. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 47:77-92
Sharkey, M A; Steedman, J G; Lund, R D et al. (1987) Tectal transplants into the occipital cortex of the newborn rat. Brain Res 428:119-23