Evaluation of single-dose umbilical cord blood-derived mononuclear cell injection immediately and 7 days after spinal cord trauma in mice
Alex Oliveira de Araujo, Gustavo Bispo dos Santos, Raphael Martus Marcon, Maria Helena Alves Nicola, Marcela Saldanha Pereira, Fernando Barbosa Sanchez, Thiego Pedro Freitas Araujo, Alexandre Fogaça Cristante

TL;DR
This study tests umbilical cord blood cells in mice with spinal injuries, finding improved tissue healing but limited motor recovery.
Contribution
Demonstrates umbilical cord blood-derived mononuclear cells reduce spinal injury damage in mice, but with limited functional recovery.
Findings
Umbilical cord blood cells reduced necrosis, hemorrhage, and degeneration in spinal cords of treated mice.
Motor recovery showed partial improvement but no significant differences between treated and control groups.
Treatment was more effective histologically in the acute phase than in the subacute phase.
Abstract
•Stem cell therapy is a promising alternative in the spinal cord injury arsenal.•Challenges in stem cell treatment in SCI: phase uncertainty and cell type controversy.•Umbilical cord mononuclear cells may enhance recovery via multiple mechanisms.•Umbilical cord mononuclear cells can promote histological improvement after SCI. Stem cell therapy is a promising alternative in the spinal cord injury arsenal. Challenges in stem cell treatment in SCI: phase uncertainty and cell type controversy. Umbilical cord mononuclear cells may enhance recovery via multiple mechanisms. Umbilical cord mononuclear cells can promote histological improvement after SCI. Experimental study utilizing a standardized Balb C mouse model. Evaluate histological changes and motor function recovery in the acute and subacute phases of Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) in mice using human Umbilical cord blood-derived…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpinal Cord Injury Research · Mesenchymal stem cell research · Nerve injury and regeneration
