3 research outputs found

    Intraparenchymal Striatal Transplants Required for Maintenance of Behavioral Recovery in an Animal Model of Huntington's Disease

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    Rats which receive injections of kainic acid (KA) into the striatum show many of the anatomical, biochemical and behavioral abnormalities seen in patients with Huntington's disease. Recently, it has been reported that fetal striatal transplants into the lesioned striatum could normalize the neurological and behavioral abnormalities produced by the KA lesion. The present study examined the issue of transplant integration in producing behavioral recovery. In one experiment, lesioned animals with transplants located within the lateral ventricle were compared against parenchymally transplanted rats. It was found that unless the ventricular transplant grew into the lesioned striatum there was no recovery. The second experiment demonstrated that electrolytic destruction of a successful fetal striatal transplant could reverse the transplant-induced behavioral recovery. These results suggest that the integrity of the transplant is important in maintaining behavioral recovery. A continuing functional interaction between the host brain and transplanted tissue may be a vital element in the success of the fetal striatal transplant

    Excitotoxic Lesions of the Neostriatum as an Animal Model of Huntington’s Disease

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