The Morphology of the Spinal Cord after Traction Injuries


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Abstract

ActualityTraction spinal cord injuries in children are of particular interest to researchers at present. Tractional damage associated not only with the trauma (SCIWORA syndrome), but can occur during elimination of deformation of the spine.

The purpose of the study was to study the peculiarities of morphological disorders of the spinal cord in traction mechanism of injury. Materials and methods. Performed 3 series of experiments on test machine AL-7 LA10. Dosed stretching of the spine of experimental animals (n=12) varied at 5, 10 and 20% of its original length. After 72 hours animals were removed from the experiment and carried out a histological study of the spinal cord.

Results and their discussion. It was found that after traction cyto - and myeloarchitectonic the cord was changed depending on the degree of stretching of the spine. If a strong tension (20%) of the neurons was exposed to irreversible changes. The recovery of the functional modules was probably due to the reorganization of surviving neural networks.

Сonclusion. The obtained data can be taken into account when planning the operations to eliminate kyfo-scoliosis spinal deformities in children.

About the authors

Igor Ivanovich Larkin

Omsk state medical Academy

Email: larkinomsk@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-9872-9881

MD, Prof. of Department of neurology and neurosurgery

Russian Federation,  12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

Viktor Aleksandrovich Akulinin

Omsk state medical Academy

Email: akulinin@omsk-osma.ru

MD, Prof., the head of Department of histology, Cytology and embryology

Russian Federation, 12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

Sergey Stepanovich Stepanov

Omsk state medical Academy

Email: serg_stepanov@mail.ru

MD, senior researcher, Department of histology, Cytology and embryology

Russian Federation, 12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

Leonid Aleksandrovich Sitko

Omsk state medical Academy

Email: sitkola128@mail.ru

MD, Prof. of Department of pediatric surgery embryology

Russian Federation, 12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

Aleksandr Sergeevich Preobrazhensky

City children's clinical hospital №3 in Omsk

Author for correspondence.
Email: alecpn@yandex.ru

PhD, neurosurgeon

Russian Federation, 12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

Sergey Borisovich Zlobin

City children's clinical hospital №3 in Omsk

Email: axon12@rambler.ru

doctor-vertebrologist

Russian Federation, 12 Lenina str., Omsk, 644001, Russian Federation

References

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Copyright (c) 2017 Larkin I.I., Akulinin V.A., Stepanov S.S., Sitko L.A., Preobrazhensky A.S., Zlobin S.B.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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