Activating Endogenous Neurogenesis for Spinal Cord Injury Repair: Recent Advances and Future Prospects

After spinal cord injury (SCI), endogenous neural stem cells are activated and migrate to the injury site where they differentiate into astrocytes, but they rarely differentiate into neurons. It is difficult for brain-derived information to be transmitted through the injury site after SCI because of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haiyang Yu, Shangbin Yang, Haotao Li, Rongjie Wu, Biqin Lai, Qiujian Zheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Spinal Neurosurgery Society 2023-03-01
Series:Neurospine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://e-neurospine.org/upload/pdf/ns-2245184-296.pdf
Description
Summary:After spinal cord injury (SCI), endogenous neural stem cells are activated and migrate to the injury site where they differentiate into astrocytes, but they rarely differentiate into neurons. It is difficult for brain-derived information to be transmitted through the injury site after SCI because of the lack of neurons that can relay neural information through the injury site, and the functional recovery of adult mammals is difficult to achieve. The development of bioactive materials, tissue engineering, stem cell therapy, and physiotherapy has provided new strategies for the treatment of SCI and shown broad application prospects, such as promoting endogenous neurogenesis after SCI. In this review, we focus on novel approaches including tissue engineering, stem cell technology, and physiotherapy to promote endogenous neurogenesis and their therapeutic effects on SCI. Moreover, we explore the mechanisms and challenges of endogenous neurogenesis for the repair of SCI.
ISSN:2586-6583
2586-6591