Aging is associated with poorer locomotor recovery after traumatic spinal cord injury in preclinical models
This is a systematic review of preclinical studies examining the impact of aging on locomotor recovery after traumatic spinal cord injury in animal models. The review synthesized findings from studies comparing young, intermediate, and aged rats and mice. The authors found that older animals consistently demonstrated significantly lower Basso, Beattie, Bresnahan locomotor scores post-injury, with this effect reported in 7 of 7 studies. One study reported that pre-injury and post-injury exercise improved locomotor recovery in aged rats to levels comparable with young rats. The authors acknowledge that the impact of aging on locomotor outcomes remains underexplored. They suggest the importance of age as a biological variable in spinal cord injury research and the potential of rehabilitative interventions like exercise, while noting that mechanistic pathways require future study. Practice relevance is restrained, as the findings are from preclinical models and do not infer clinical outcomes.