Injury and potential for recovery in CNS Flashcards
1
Q
CNS vs PNS
A
CNS = spinal cord and brain PNS = cranial nerves, ganglia and spinal nerves
2
Q
Give 5 types of injury in CNS
A
- developmental
- trauma
- ischaemic (stroke)
- hypoxic (cardiac arrest)
- inflammatory (MS)
- Neurodegenrative (AD,PD)
- infection (meningitis, encephalitis)
- tumours
3
Q
Pathology
A
- most types of injury affect neurons, glial cells, BBB, CSF
4
Q
What is stroke?
A
- blood supply to part of brain occluded
- acute loss of blood supply damages regions supplied by blocked artery
- takes 6-8 mins of ischaemia to cause infarction
5
Q
Hypoxic brain injury
A
- reduction of whole brain oxygenation
- preferentially affects the most metaboloically active parts of the brain - grey matter of cerebral cortex and basal ganglia
6
Q
Multiple sclerosis
A
- inflammation > demyelination > neuronal dysfunction
- autoimmune condition that attacks myeline sheath leading to neuronal dysfunction
- MR gives patchy high signal areas where you’d expect white matter
7
Q
How does injury affect neurons and their connections?
A
- fate of neuron following axotomy and target loss - axon is cut (cant transmit signals), loss of trophic factors and support
- neurons that lose their normal input are denervated
- damage has 2 consequences: upstream, the cell body may die via apoptosis (retrograde degeneration). downstream, distal axon dies (anterograde degeneration)
8
Q
Regeneration in CNS vs PNS
A
- PNS can regrow if nerve sheath remains intact. Helped by clean up of damaged parts by macrophages, Schwann cells, and the speed of clean-up
- most CNS fibres wont regenerate - clean up is slow, oligodendrocytes inhibit regeneration, and environment isnt optimal
9
Q
What is Sunderland’s classification of nerve injury?
A
- Grade 1 - neuropraxia (conduction disruption with intact axon and supporting structures. full recovery within days, no surgery needed)
- Grade 2 = Axonotmesis (disrupted axon, intact endoneurium, variable recovery)
- Grade 3 = Neurotmesis with preservation of perineurium (endoneurium is disrupted, 60-80% recovery)
- Grade 4 = Neurotmesis with pres. of epineurium (requires nerve grafting)
- grade 5 = neurotmesis with complete transection of nerve trunk (need bypass/jump grafting)
10
Q
Glial scarring
A
- gliosis involves proliferation of astrocytes and microglia after CNS injury to protect and aid in healing process
- has beneficial and detrimental effects
- regenerates a tissue barrier after BBB compromise and promotes revascularisation of injured brain
- neuro-developmental inhibitors are secreted by astrocytes that prevent axon regrowth and regeneration
11
Q
Neurogenesis
A
- birth of new neurons
- only evidence for it occurring in hippocampus and near the lateral ventricles
12
Q
How do you fix the brain if you cannot regrow new neurons?
A
- compensation - brain areas take over functions of damaged area
- new terminals from presynaptic neurons - additional synapses and more receptors
- reorganisation
13
Q
How do we know neuroplasticity exists?
A
- fMRIs show changes in brain activity pre and post stroke
- brain connections change with unaffected side compensating
14
Q
Treatments
A
- constraint-induced movement therapy (make stroke patients do things with their bad arm by impeding their good one)
- transcranial magnetic stimulation (magnetic fields cause stimulation of cells to release NTs)
- Stem cells
- Induced pluripotent stem cells
- brain-machine interfaces