2011
DOI: 10.3109/14653249.2010.536213
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Clinicopathologic findings following intra-articular injection of autologous and allogeneic placentally derived equine mesenchymal stem cells in horses

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Cited by 128 publications
(138 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, injection of allogeneic placentally-derived MSCs into equine joints resulted in self-limiting inflammatory responses with no difference in the type or severity of the inflammatory response elicited by autologous versus allogeneic MSCs [72]. …”
Section: Clinical Impressions and Future Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Furthermore, injection of allogeneic placentally-derived MSCs into equine joints resulted in self-limiting inflammatory responses with no difference in the type or severity of the inflammatory response elicited by autologous versus allogeneic MSCs [72]. …”
Section: Clinical Impressions and Future Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Others: SOX2+ [9][10][11][12] Swine Embryonic cell markers: OCT-3/4+ Others: SOX2+, NANOG+ [8] As in human medicine (for review see [7,15,16]), also in veterinary medicine an important property to evaluate stem cells is to assess their usefulness in allogenic regenerative medicine. To test the immunological properties of UCM-derived cells, Carrade et al, (2010) studied healthy horses following a single intra-articular injection of autologous and allogeneic MSCs from equine UCM and found no significant differences between the degree and type of inflammation elicited by self and non-self-MSC [17].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intra-articular injection of both types of MSC elicited synovial swelling, but there were no significant differences between the synovial effects of allogenic or autologous cells. These results open a new avenue for the treatment of joint diseases with allogenic stem cell therapies (Carrade et al 2011).…”
Section: Autologous Conditioned Serum (Acs)mentioning
confidence: 99%