ABSTRACT
Nerve regeneration requires not only an autologous, allogenous, or biodegradable scaffolding,
but additional interactions with regeneration-promoting Schwann cells. Considering
the pluripotency of bone marrow stromal cells into different lineages, the authors
compared biodegradable conduits with the application of cultured Schwann cells and
bone marrow stromal cells in a rat sciatic injury model. Simple conduit bridging served
as controls. Electrophysiologic evaluation and histologic morphometrical analysis
were performed after 6 weeks; both groups with cultured cells showed a statistically
significantly higher number of axons, more well-shaped remyelinated axons, and an
advance in clinical functional recovery (SFI) than the simple conduit-bridging group.
Confocal microscopy found that bone marrow stromal cells adopted the Schwann-cell
phenotype, expressing S100 protein. Considering the ease of aspiration and greater
resource of bone marrow stromal cells, the implantation of a biodegradable conduit
with cultured bone marrow stromal cells was capable of presenting an alternative to
conduits with Schwann cells for bridging nerve defects.
KEYWORDS
Nerve regeneration - bone marrow stromal cells - conduits
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Baoguo JiangM.D. Ph.D.
Department of Orthopaedics and Trauma, Peking University People's Hospital
Beijing China 100044