1 Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Group, Stark Neurosciences Research Institute, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
3 Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
J Neurotrauma. 2019 Jun 15;36(12):1974-1984. doi: 10.1089/neu.2018.6233. Epub 2019 Jan 25.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) afflicts hundreds of thousands of Americans, and most SCI (∼80%) occurs in males. In experimental animal models, however, many studies used females. Funding agencies like the National Institutes of Health recommend that new proposed studies should include both genders due to variations in gender response to injuries, diseases, and treatments. However, cost and considerations for some animal models, such as SCI, affect investigators in adapting to this recommendation. Research has increased comparing gender effects in various disease and injury models, including SCI. However, most studies use weight-matched animals, which poses issues in comparing results and outcomes. The present study compared histologic and functional outcomes between age-matched male and female Sprague-Dawley rats in a moderate thoracic contusion SCI model. Cresyl violet and eosin staining showed no significant differences in lesion volume between genders after 9 weeks post-SCI ( > 0.05). Luxol fast blue-stained spared myelin was similar between genders, although slightly greater (∼6%) in spared myelin, compared with cord volume ( = 0.044). Glial reactivity and macrophage labeling in the lesion area was comparable between genders, as well. Basso, Beattie, Bresnahan (BBB) functional scores were not significantly different between genders, and Hargreaves thermal hyperalgesia and Gridwalk sensorimotor analyses also were similar between genders, compared with uninjured gender controls. Analysis of covariance showed weight did not influence functional recovery as assessed through BBB ( = 0.65) or Gridwalk assessment ( = 0.63) in this study. In conclusion, our findings suggest age-matched male and female rats recover similarly in a common clinically relevant SCI model.
脊髓损伤 (SCI) 影响了数十万美国人,大多数 SCI(∼80%)发生在男性中。然而,在实验动物模型中,许多研究使用雌性动物。由于性别对损伤、疾病和治疗的反应存在差异,像美国国立卫生研究院这样的资助机构建议新提出的研究应该包括男女两性。然而,一些动物模型(如 SCI)的成本和考虑因素影响了研究人员适应这一建议。研究已经增加了比较各种疾病和损伤模型中性别效应的研究,包括 SCI。然而,大多数研究使用体重匹配的动物,这在比较结果和结果时存在问题。本研究比较了年龄匹配的雄性和雌性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠在中度胸段挫伤 SCI 模型中的组织学和功能结果。在 SCI 后 9 周,Cresyl 紫和伊红染色显示性别之间的病变体积没有显著差异(>0.05)。性别之间的 spared 髓鞘 Luxol 快速蓝染色相似,尽管与脊髓体积相比,spared 髓鞘略高(∼6%)(=0.044)。性别之间病变区域的胶质反应和巨噬细胞标记也相似。Basso、Beattie、Bresnahan(BBB)功能评分在性别之间没有显著差异,Hargreaves 热痛觉过敏和 Gridwalk 感觉运动分析在性别之间也相似,与未受伤的性别对照组相比。协方差分析表明,在本研究中,体重没有影响通过 BBB(=0.65)或 Gridwalk 评估(=0.63)评估的功能恢复。总之,我们的发现表明,年龄匹配的雄性和雌性大鼠在常见的临床相关 SCI 模型中恢复情况相似。