Early Detection of Neuroinflammation and White Matter Damage Following Dorsal Spinal Nerve Root Sectioning in a Nonhuman Primate Model
Feng Wang, John C. Gore, Li Min Chen

TL;DR
This study shows that advanced MRI techniques can detect early spinal cord changes after nerve root injury in monkeys, which could help monitor nerve damage and treatment effectiveness.
Contribution
The study introduces the use of multiparametric MRI to detect early spinal cord pathology following dorsal nerve root injury in nonhuman primates.
Findings
Multiparametric MRI detected axonal degeneration and demyelination in the spinal cord after nerve root injury.
Changes in MRI metrics were observed as early as one week post-lesion.
The findings suggest potential for noninvasive monitoring of spinal cord pathology and therapeutic evaluation.
Abstract
Dorsal rhizotomy, or spinal dorsal nerve root lesioning, is a surgical procedure used to treat intractable nerve pain by selectively severing sensory afferent nerve roots. This study aimed to evaluate whether multiparametric MRI, including diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), quantitative magnetization transfer (qMT), chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST), and relayed nuclear Overhauser enhancement (rNOE), can sensitively detect structural and biochemical changes in the intact spinal cord following a focal dorsal nerve root section in a nonhuman primate model. In four squirrel monkeys, unilateral dorsal nerve roots at cervical segments C4 and C5 were surgically transected. MRI data were collected using a 9.4 T scanner with a custom saddle‐shaped transmit‐receive quadrature coil before and 1 week after lesioning. DTI‐derived fractional anisotropy (FA), axial diffusivity (AD), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Cervical and Thoracic Myelopathy · Nerve injury and regeneration
