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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Methylprednisolone neutralizes the beneficial effects of erythropoietin in experimental spinal cord injury
Stephana CarelliBarbara Di StefanoAlfredo GorioMichael BrinesThomas ColemanSilvia De BiasiAnna Maria Di GiulioL. MadaschiAnthony Ceramisubject
InflammationPharmacologyProinflammatory cytokineRats Sprague-DawleymedicineAnimalsDrug InteractionsMethylprednisolone HemisuccinateInterleukin 6ErythropoietinSpinal cord injurySpinal Cord InjuriesMultidisciplinarybiologyInterleukin-6Tumor Necrosis Factor-alphabusiness.industryBiological Sciencesmedicine.diseaseRecombinant ProteinsRatscytokines glucocorticoids inflammation neuroprotection traumaMethylprednisoloneErythropoietinImmunologybiology.proteinTumor necrosis factor alphamedicine.symptombusinessGlucocorticoidmedicine.drugdescription
Inflammation plays a major pathological role in spinal cord injury (SCI). Although antiinflammatory treatment using the glucocorticoid methyprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS) improved outcomes in several multicenter clinical trials, additional clinical experience suggests that MPSS is only modestly beneficial in SCI and poses a risk for serious complications. Recent work has shown that erythropoietin (EPO) moderates CNS tissue injury, in part by reducing inflammation, limiting neuronal apoptosis, and restoring vascular autoregulation. We determined whether EPO and MPSS act synergistically in SCI. Using a rat model of contusive SCI, we compared the effects of EPO [500-5,000 units/kg of body weight (kg-bw)] with MPSS (30 mg/kg-bw) for proinflammatory cytokine production, histological damage, and motor function at 1 month after a compression injury. Although high-dose EPO and MPSS suppressed proinflammatory cytokines within the injured spinal cord, only EPO was associated with reduced microglial infiltration, attenuated scar formation, and sustained neurological improvement. Unexpectedly, coadministration of MPSS antagonized the protective effects of EPO, even though the EPO receptor was up-regulated normally after injury. These data illustrate that the suppression of proinflammatory cytokines alone does not necessarily prevent secondary injury and suggest that glucocorticoids should not be coadministered in clinical trials evaluating the use of EPO for treatment of SCI.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-10-31 | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |