Human Umbilical Cord Blood Cells Ameliorate Motor Deficits in Rabbits in a Cerebral Palsy Model.

dc.contributor.author

Drobyshevsky, Alexander

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Cotten, C Michael

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Shi, Zhongjie

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Luo, Kehuan

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Jiang, Rugang

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Derrick, Matthew

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Tracy, Elizabeth T

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Gentry, Tracy

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Goldberg, Ronald N

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Kurtzberg, Joanne

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Tan, Sidhartha

dc.date.accessioned

2022-03-23T19:04:05Z

dc.date.available

2022-03-23T19:04:05Z

dc.date.issued

2015-01

dc.date.updated

2022-03-23T19:04:04Z

dc.description.abstract

Cerebral palsy (CP) has a significant impact on both patients and society, but therapy is limited. Human umbilical cord blood cells (HUCBC), containing various stem and progenitor cells, have been used to treat various brain genetic conditions. In small animal experiments, HUCBC have improved outcomes after hypoxic-ischemic (HI) injury. Clinical trials using HUCBC are underway, testing feasibility, safety and efficacy for neonatal injury as well as CP. We tested HUCBC therapy in a validated rabbit model of CP after acute changes secondary to HI injury had subsided. Following uterine ischemia at 70% gestation, we infused HUCBC into newborn rabbit kits with either mild or severe neurobehavioral changes. Infusion of high-dose HUCBC (5 × 10(6) cells) dramatically altered the natural history of the injury, alleviating the abnormal phenotype including posture, righting reflex, locomotion, tone, and dystonia. Half the high dose showed lesser but still significant improvement. The swimming test, however, showed that joint function did not restore to naïve control function in either group. Tracing HUCBC with either MRI biomarkers or PCR for human DNA found little penetration of HUCBC in the newborn brain in the immediate newborn period, suggesting that the beneficial effects were not due to cellular integration or direct proliferative effects but rather to paracrine signaling. This is the first study to show that HUCBC improve motor performance in a dose-dependent manner, perhaps by improving compensatory repair processes.

dc.identifier

000374107

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0378-5866

dc.identifier.issn

1421-9859

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24632

dc.language

eng

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S. Karger AG

dc.relation.ispartof

Developmental neuroscience

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10.1159/000374107

dc.subject

Animals

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Rabbits

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Humans

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Cerebral Palsy

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Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain

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Disease Models, Animal

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Cord Blood Stem Cell Transplantation

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Behavior, Animal

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Motor Activity

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Paracrine Communication

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Pregnancy

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Female

dc.title

Human Umbilical Cord Blood Cells Ameliorate Motor Deficits in Rabbits in a Cerebral Palsy Model.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Kurtzberg, Joanne|0000-0002-3370-0703

pubs.begin-page

349

pubs.end-page

362

pubs.issue

4-5

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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School of Nursing

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Nursing

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Obstetrics and Gynecology

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Pathology

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Pediatrics

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Surgery

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Pediatrics, Neonatology

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Surgery, Pediatric General Surgery

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Initiatives

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Duke Innovation & Entrepreneurship

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Pediatrics, Transplant and Cellular Therapy

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

37

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