학술논문

Advances in Management of Spinal Cord Injury Using Stem Cell-derived Extracellular Vesicles: A Review Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Basic & Clinical Neuroscience. Jul/Aug2023, Vol. 14 Issue 4, p443-451. 9p.
Subject
*EXTRACELLULAR vesicles
*SPINAL cord injuries
*CENTRAL nervous system
*TISSUE engineering
*REGENERATIVE medicine
Language
ISSN
2008-126X
Abstract
Introduction: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is characterized by serious both motor and sensory disability of the limbs below the injured segment. It is the most traumatic disorder among central nervous system (CNS) conditions which not only leads to psychological and physical harm to patients but also results in a dramatic loss in the life quality. Many efforts have been developed to find a therapeutic approach for SCI; however, an effective treatment has not yet been found. The lack of effective treatment approach and rehabilitation of SCI underscores the need to identify novel approaches. Tissue engineering associated with stem cells has been recently introduced as an effective treatment approaches for traumatic SCI. Although, low survival rates, immune rejection, cell dedifferentiation, and tumorigenicity have been addressed for tissue engineering. Regenerative medicine is an interdisciplinary field developing and applying tissue engineering, stem cell (SC) therapy, and SC-derived extracellular vesicle therapy that aims to provide reliable and safe ways to replace injured tissues and organs. The application of mesenchymal stem cellsderived extracellular vesicles (MSC-EVs) has recently attracted attention to improve central nervous system dysfunction such as SCI, mainly by promoting neurogenesis and angiogenesis. Methods: In this review article the latest information of SCI improvement using stem cellderived extracellular vesicles published data in the Web of Science, Scopus, Science Direct and Pub Med databases were collected. Results: The data collected show that MSC-EVs, including exosomes, alone or in combination with scaffolds can can regenerate the injured nerve in SCI. Conclusion: This study summarizes the efficacy of MSC-EVs, including exosomes, alone or in combination with scaffolds in the treatment of SCI and then discusses the therapeutic outcomes observed in SCI experimental models following treatment with MSC-EVs alone or loaded on scaffolds in particular collagen-based scaffolds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]