Sir,
Cephalosomatic anastomosis (CSA), that is, the surgical transference of a healthy
head on a surgically beheaded body under deep hypothermic conditions, as conceived
by Robert White,[39] hinges on the reconnection of the severed stumps of two heterologous
spinal cords (reviewed in reference).[7]
On the occasion of the first CSA between primates in 1970, Dr White hewed to the view
that a severed spinal cord could not be reconnected, thus leaving the animal paralyzed.[7
39]
In 1902, Stewart and Harte reported on CN, aged 26 years, who had her spinal cord
severed by a 0.32 caliber gunshot. The distance between the segments of the cord was
0.75 inch, as verified by all five attending physicians: “The ends of the cord were
then approximated with 3 chromicized catgut sutures passed by means of a small staphylorraphy
needle, one suture being passed anteroposteriorly through the entire thickness of
the cord and the other two being passed transversely. This part of the operation was
attended with unusual difficulties because of…the wide interval between the fragments,
the catgut frequently tearing out before the ends were finally brought together.”
Sixteen months later, “the patient slides out of bed into her chair by her own efforts
and is able to stand with either hand on the back of a chair, thus supporting much
of the weight of the body.”[36]
Importantly, they reviewed several cases of patients with sharp wounds to the cord
that spontaneously recovered from initial paraplegia. Their conclusion was that “the
operation of myelorrhaphy will be specially indicated in cases in which the cord has
been cut by a sharp instrument or severed by a projectile.”[36] Whereas myelorrhaphy
was not effective at 15 months in a young paraplegic patient after a self-inflicted
0.38 caliber gunshot,[16
35] nonetheless, a huge body of evidence accrued over the past decades made the first
part of Stewart and Harte's prediction highly relevant.[33] In fact, had White attempted
to reattach the sharply severed cord stumps in the monkey, the possibility exists
that the animal might have recovered at least partial motricity.
In this paper, I will detail the recently proposed GEMINI spinal cord fusion (SCF)
protocol in view of the first human CSA,[7] giving new meaning to Stewart and Harte's
prediction. The recent study by Estrada et al.,[14] in which rats whose spinal cords
were sharply transected recovered ambulation, confirms that CSA (HEAVEN: 7) is feasible.
Two key principles underlie the GEMINI SCF:
A sharp severance of the cords is not as damaging as clinical spinal cord injury
The gray matter “motor highway” is more important than the pyramidal tract in human
motor processing.
PRINCIPLE 1: SHARP SEVERANCE
The key to SCF is a sharp severance of the cords themselves, with its attendant minimal
damage to both the axons in the white matter and the neurons in the gray laminae.
This is a key point: A typical force generated by creating a sharp transection is
less than 10 N versus approximately 26000 N experienced during spinal cord injury,
a 2600× difference![33]
A specially fashioned diamond microtomic snare-blade is one option (unpublished);
a nanoknife made of a thin layer of silicon nitride with a nanometer sharp cutting
edge is another alternative.[8
9] Notably, the mechanical strength of silicon is superior to that of steel.[34]
PRINCIPLE 2: GRAY MATTER “MOTOR HIGHWAY” VS PYRAMIDAL TRACT
In man, motricity is only modestly subserved by long axonal systems coursing through
the spinal white matter as taught in contemporary anatomical and neurology textbooks
(parenthetically, “Subdivision of the (human) white matter…into tracts is…not feasible,
because most of the tracts mix with one another and overlap”).[27] Skilled voluntary
movements of the hand in man are often considered to be dependent on the direct access
of motor neurons (MN) from the primary motor cortex to the cord (monosynaptic Pyramidal
Tract). However, indirect pathways from the motor cortex (e.g. corticobulbospinal
pathways via, e.g., the reticulospinal tracts) and spinal interneuronal systems by
far contribute the majority of inputs to the MNs: In man, the corticospinal tract
predominantly terminates in the intermediate layers of the spinal cord where many
interneurons are located.[1] Laruelle[24] wrote: L’association plurisegmentaire est
réalisée, non seulement par les voies cordonales connues, mais par un système de fibres
intrinsèques de la substance grise, pouvait parcourir plusieurs segments successifs:
Elles confèrent une fonction conductrice à la substance grise de la moelle (The plurisegmentary
association is brought about not only via the known cordonal pathways, but via a gray-matter-based
system of intrinsic fibers, which cover up to several cord segments: These confer
conductive properties to the cord gray matter)”. This association is further enacted
via short fibers lying closest to the spinal gray matter that connect nearby spinal
segments over short or very short distances (e.g., the lateral limiting layer of the
Ground Bundles).[26] This explains why «in man, recovery of motor function including
the distal movement is compatible with …degeneration of 83% of the pyramidal tract
fibers»,[20] as occurs for lesions restricted to the human lateral corticospinal tracts.[28]
In the words of Bucy et al.,[6] “The pyramidal tract…is not essential to useful control
of the skeletal musculature…In the absence of the corticospinal fibers other fiber
systems, particularly some…multineuronal mechanism passing through the mesencephalic
tegmentum, are capable of producing useful, well-coordinated, strong and delicate
movements of the extremities.”
In a recent case report, a subject with tetraplegia (ASIA A) recovered 15 months later
to ASIA D, despite a 62% atrophy of the white matter tissue at the injury epicenter,[12]
including the pyramidal tracts. Even in multiple sclerosis, long regarded as the prototypical
white matter (long axons) disease, it is the damage to the gray matter that accounts
for most of the related motor disability – even in cases without white matter loss![30]
Similar anatomical arguments – propriospinal transmission versus spinothalamic tract
in the case of nociception – could be made for the sensory return.[18]
In GEMINI, the gray matter neuropil will be restored by spontaneous regrowth of the
severed axons/dendrites over very short distances at the point of contact between
the apposed cords.
FUSOGEN-ASSISTED NEURAL RECONSTITUTION
GEMINI exploits special substances (fusogens/sealants: Poly-ethylene glycol [PEG],
Chitosan) that have the power to literally fuse together severed axons or seal injured
leaky neurons.[7
11
29] It is based on the concept of biological fusion, which occurs both naturally (e.g.,
in myoblasts) and artificially (e.g. hybridoma cells): Up to 10% of severed axons
in some invertebrates can undergo spontaneous fusion with their separate distal segments.[10]
Different technologies can induce axonal fusion: Chemical, laser, and electrofusion.[10
34
40] Chemical fusion is likely mediated by a dehydration effect and volume-exclusion
aggregation of membrane lipids bringing adjacent lipids into physical contact.[11]
Two scenarios are particularly attractive: (i) A PEG containing solution is flowed
for 2 min (more than 3’ is actually deleterious) over the lesion site, and then flushed
out, as outlined by Bittner et al.;[5] or (ii) a semi-interpenetrating network of
PEG and photo-cross-linkable chitosan can be employed as an in situ-forming nerve
adhesive/fusogen.[2] Chitosan nanoparticles or PEG can also be injected IV for several
hours to enhance the effect.[7] Interestingly, there may be a body temperature effect
on PEG's viscosity and efficacy (Kouhzaei et al.).[21] In contrast, chitosan in an
injectable solution that moves throughout the systemic circulation – apparently regardless
of viscosity: Thus the route of administration does not appear to matter in a manner
similar to PEG.[11] Animal experiments on transected cords have already given proof-of-principle
of the feasibility of fusogen-assisted SCF.[7
11
21
22
32] Anyway, PEG-mediated functional reconnection between closely apposed proximal
and distal segments of severed axons takes many minutes of absolute immobility of
the axon segments and an untested period of immobilization of the tissue for the repair
to become permanent.[11] The question is whether this is actually required for successful
reconstitution of motor (and sensory) transmission, also considering how perfect one-on-one
axonal alignment is impossible. As proven by Bittner et al.[5
31] in peripheral nerves in vivo, behavioral recovery is excellent and improves over
time after PEG fusion. This means that a sufficient number of axonal proximal stumps
get fused with the distal counterparts in such a way to ensure appropriate electrophysio-logical
conduction, likely the result of tight axonal packing. This number is likely low (10–15%),
and yet enough for recovery, reflecting the potential for substantial plasticity in
the injured CNS.[34] A similar figure applies to the damaged spinal cord in man,[4]
where the number of axons in the spinal white matter is estimated at over 20 million,
with about 1 million pyramidal fibers. Also, reconnection with an adjacent axon, as
long as it is not an extreme mismatch, may restore acceptable function.[34] Dense
axonal packing would ensure that a number of fibers would get fused.
Notice that during CSA no gap is expected between the cord stumps. Should have this
not been the case, transplantable miniature neurono-axonal constructs internalized
within engineered tubes could have been used to fill the gap (e.g.[13]). Actually,
PEG appears to be more than sufficient even in this context. Estrada et al.[14] have
fully transected rats’ spinal cords and filled the gap with PEG 600: They reported
massive elongation of axons from all fiber populations (including interneurons) that
grew into the PEG bridge and became remyelinated upon entering the CNS tissue. The
axon growth effect was already visible at 1 week posttreatment, grew in time steadily
and was long-lasting. Rats could recover physiologic locomotion.
Tangentially, collagen conduits containing autologous platelet-rich plasma have allowed
successful axonal regeneration and neurological recovery in clinical peripheral nerve
injury with gaps up to 12 cm (16 cm along with an added sensory nerve graft).[23]
ELECTRICITY-ACCELERATED RECOVERY
In GEMINI, local sprouting between neurons in the gray matter (see above) will reestablish
a functional bridge over days to weeks. This process is accelerated by electrical
stimulation via application of a spinal cord stimulator (SCS) straddling the fusion
point. For instance, 1 h of continuous electrical stimulation at 20 Hz applied right
after suturing together the stumps of a transected peripheral nerve cut the regeneration
time from 8–10 to 3 weeks; similar accelerations are seen in man.[17]
The role of electrical stimulation goes well beyond acceleration of axonal and dendritic
regrowth. The spinal cord has the capacity to execute complex stereotyped motor tasks
in response to rather unspecific stimuli even after chronic separation from supraspinal
structures. However, being deprived of sufficient supraspinal drive, neural processing,
and pattern generating networks caudal to a spinal cord lesion lose an adequate, sustainable
state of excitability to be fully operational: SCS (15–60 Hz, 5–9 V) provides a multi-segmental
tonic neural drive to these circuitries and “tune” their physiological state to a
more functional level.[25] Thus, “loss of voluntary control of movement may be attributed
to not only a physical disruption of descending connections, but also to a physiological
alteration of the central state of excitability of the spinal circuitry…(spinal cord)
stimulation may facilitate excitation of propriospinal neurons which support propagation
of the voluntary command to the lumbosacral spinal cord…after repetitive epidural
stimulation and training…multiple, novel neuronal pathways and synapses (are established).”[3]
The result is recovery of intentional movement in the setting of complete paralysis
of the legs.[3
25] Similar arguments and results apply to the cervical spinal cord.[37] Of course,
useful plasticity will not only occur in the cord, but also at higher levels, including
the motor cortex.[12
19]
CONCLUSION
In sum, the GEMINI SCF protocol hinges on the following steps [Figure 1]:
Figure 1
(a) Longitudinal cut along a primate spinal cord depicting the internuncial system
(gray matter motor highway) and the nano-size of the proposed severance (left). The
red circle on the right side of this panel is the pyramidal tract, shown in two exploded
views of a sharply transected cord (middle right) and of the cord in the vertebral
canal (lower middle right). (b)Visualization of the severed pyramidal tract. The uppermost
image depicts a motor neuron in the cortex sending forth the axonal prolongation.
Middle panel: The pyramidal tract (red) and a portion of its severed axons. Lower
panel: The sharply severed axonal extensions (adapted from Laruelle 1937 and several
images in the public domain)
The sharp severance of the cervical cords (donor's and recipient's), with its attendant
minimal tissue damage
The exploitation of the gray matter internuncial sensori-motor “highway” rebridged
by sprouting connections between the two reapposed cord stumps. This could also explain
the partial motor recovery in a paraplegic patient submitted to implantation of olfactory
ensheathing glia and peripheral nerve bridges: A 2-mm bridge of remaining cord matter
might have allowed gray matter axons to reconnect the two ends[38]
The bridging as per point 2 above is accelerated by electrical SCS straddling the
fusion point
The application of “fusogens/sealants”: Sealants “seal” the thin layer of injured
cells in the gray matter, both neuronal, glial and vascular, with little expected
scarring; simultaneously they fuse a certain number of axons in the white matter.
During CSA, microsutures (mini-myelorrhaphy) will be applied along the outer rim of
the apposed stumps. A cephalosomatic anastomosee will thus be kept in induced coma
for 3–4 weeks following CSA to give time to the stumps to refuse (and avoid movements
of the neck) and will then undergo appropriate rehabilitation in the months following
the procedure.
In addition, the immunosuppressant regime that will be instituted after CSA is expected
to be pro-regenerative.[15]