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The purpose of this research study is:
Full description
Of the estimated 11,000 cases of acute spinal cord injury (SCI) which occur each year in North America, 5% involve children. The injury is divided into the primary mechanical event which causes the injury, and the secondary events which follow. Outcome for SCI depends of the severity of the primary injury (complete vs. incomplete) and the spinal cord level of the injury. Current therapy is designed only to minimize the secondary events of SCI and other trauma-associated injuries. Because the current therapy does nothing to reverse the primary insult, significant advances in reducing the disability associated with SCI are unlikely. Recent basic science and animal studies suggest that stem cell treatment can foster functional improvement after SCI by helping repair the primary injury and reducing the secondary injury.
Stem cells are "unspecialized" cells in the body that do not have a specific function yet (for example, they have not become "heart cells" or "brain cells" yet.) Stem cells are able to divide and develop into more mature, function-specific cells and take the place of those cells that die, are injured or can no longer function the way they are supposed to. Stem cells are being studied a lot because of this ability and there is the possibility that they may be used to take the place of cells that are no longer working in different parts of the body because of disease (as in cancer, diabetes, and heart disease). Stem cells can be found throughout the body, but they are most common in the bone marrow, the thick, spongy material inside the bones.
The primary objective of this study is to determine the safety of transplantation of the patient's own (autologous) Bone Marrow Progenitor Cells (BMPC) in children with SCI. The secondary objective is to determine if functional, physiological and anatomic outcome measures are improved after BMPC autologous transplantation in children with SCI.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Lack of informed consent.
Uncorrected coagulopathy during the baseline period defined as: INR > 1.4; PTT > 35 sec; PLT < 100,000.
Pre-injury history of seizure disorder and/or neurological impairment where the patient would not be able to participate in age appropriate pain rating scales.
A history of prior SCI or severe traumatic brain injury.
Known history of:
Unhealed fractures or wounds including osteomyelitis.
Pneumonia, or chronic lung disease requiring oxygen.
An anatomically discontinuous spinal cord diagnosed by CT or MRI imaging.
Positive urine pregnancy test (urine pregnancy test will be routinely performed on females of childbearing potential, age 11 or older.
Participation in a concurrent intervention study.
Desire for organ-donation in the event of death.
Unwillingness or inability to stay for at least four days following BMPC infusion (should any problems arise following the infusion) and to return for a 30 day, and 6 month follow-up visit, and be available for 1 year, and 2 year follow-up phone calls.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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