Mesenchymal stem cell therapy of brain ischemic stroke in rats

2007 
Mesenchymal stem cell (MSCs)-based therapy is a promising attempt to improve the recovery after stroke. Our experiments were carried out on inbred Wistar-Kyoto rats. MSCs were isolated, expanded in culture, and labeled with vital fluorescent dye PKH-26. Animals were subjected to middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). After three days, MCAO 5 × 106 isolated MSCs were injected into the tail vein of the experimental rats. The control animal group received PBS injections (negative control). Therapy results were evaluated by the following parameters: behavioral and neurological testing, the inured brain areas, damaged brain structures, neuron state, and vessel quantity in the region close to with necrosis zone. It was shown that control animals (PBS injection) did not return to their initial behavioral and neurological state within 6 weeks, while the experimental animals (MSCs injection), within 2–3 weeks after MCAO, had parameters like intact rats. The size of the damaged region in the control group was larger than in the experimental group by a factor of approximately 1.3. The damage in MSC-treated rats was limited to the neocortex; caudate nucleus, capsula externa and piriform cortex remained uninjured. The small vessel quantity in the “border” regions was twice as high as compared to the control group and approximately equal to the number of vessels in an intact brain. For the first time, we demonstrated that the vessel quantity in the neocortex and caudate nucleus of the contralateral hemisphere after MSC transplantation was twice as high as in control rats. It is concluded that the MSC transplantation exerts a beneficial influence upon the brain tissue reparation after stroke.
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