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1.
Previous work has demonstrated that postnatal and adult rats show different physiological responses to lateral fluid percussion (FP) brain injury. Compared to adult animals, the younger rats showed longer apnea and shorter unconsciousness, and sustained hypotension at all injury severities, with higher mortality following severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). To determine if these younger rats exhibit differential cognitive impairments, the Morris water maze (MWM) was used to compare the degree of spatial learning deficits between moderately injured postnatal day 17 (P17), P28, and adult rats, as well as their age-matched controls. Comparisons between shams of different ages showed a maturational time course for MWM acquisition, where adult rats learned the task 34-58% faster than younger age groups. Injured adults showed escape latency deficits throughout the entire training period, took 39% fewer direct paths to the platform during training, took 24% longer to reach criterion performance, and showed poor probe trial performance than adult shams. Injured P28s exhibited escape latency deficits during the first week, with 23% more trials to criterion and 24% fewer direct paths compared to P28 shams. In contrast, injured P17 rats showed no significant difference from age-matched controls in terms of escape latency, number of direct paths taken, or time to criterion performance. This work suggests that, upon surviving the insult, P17 injured rats show remarkable sparing compared to P28 and adult injured animals.  相似文献   

2.
Minimizing secondary injury after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the primary goal of cerebral resuscitation. For more than two decades, hyperventilation has been one of the most often used strategies in the management of TBI. Laboratory and clinical studies, however, have verified a post-TBI state of reduced cerebral perfusion that may increase the brain's vulnerability to secondary injury. In addition, it has been suggested in a clinical study that hyperventilation may worsen outcome after TBI. OBJECT: Using the controlled cortical impact model in rats, the authors tested the hypothesis that aggressive hyperventilation applied immediately after TBI would worsen functional outcome, expand the contusion, and promote neuronal death in selectively vulnerable hippocampal neurons. METHODS: Twenty-six intubated, mechanically ventilated, isoflurane-anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to controlled cortical impact (4 m/second, 2.5-mm depth of deformation) and randomized after 10 minutes to either hyperventilation (PaCO2 = 20.3 +/- 0.7 mm Hg) or normal ventilation groups (PaCO2 = 34.9 +/- 0.3 mm Hg) containing 13 rats apiece and were treated for 5 hours. Beam balance and Morris water maze (MWM) performance latencies were measured in eight rats from each group on Days 1 to 5 and 7 to 11, respectively, after controlled cortical impact. The rats were killed at 14 days postinjury, and serial coronal sections of their brains were studied for contusion volume and hippocampal neuron counting (CA1, CA3) by an observer who was blinded to their treatment group. Mortality rates were similar in both groups (two of 13 in the normal ventilation compared with three of 13 in the hyperventilation group, not significant [NS]). There were no differences between the groups in mean arterial blood pressure, brain temperature, and serum glucose concentration. There were no differences between groups in performance latencies for both beam balance and MWM or contusion volume (27.8 +/- 5.1 mm3 compared with 27.8 +/- 3.3 mm3, NS) in the normal ventilation compared with the hyperventilation groups, respectively. In brain sections cut from the center of the contusion, hippocampal neuronal survival in the CA1 region was similar in both groups; however, hyperventilation reduced the number of surviving hippocampal CA3 neurons (29.7 cells/hpf, range 24.2-31.7 in the normal ventilation group compared with 19.9 cells/hpf, range 17-23.7 in the hyperventilation group [25th-75th percentiles]; *p < 0.05, Mann-Whitney rank-sum test). CONCLUSIONS: Aggressive hyperventilation early after TBI augments CA3 hippocampal neuronal death; however, it did not impair functional outcome or expand the contusion. These data indicate that CA3 hippocampal neurons are selectively vulnerable to the effects of hyperventilation after TBI. Further studies delineating the mechanisms underlying these effects are needed, because the injudicious application of hyperventilation early after TBI may contribute to secondary neuronal injury.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of augmenting NMDA receptor activation on cognitive deficits produced by traumatic brain injury (TBI). Specifically, D-cycloserine (DCS), a partial agonist of the NMDA-associated glycine site, was tested as a potential cognitive enhancer. Rats were injured using lateral fluid percussion TBI (2.8 +/- .10 atm). On days 1-15 post-injury, animals were injected (i.p.) with vehicle (n = 8), 10 mg/kg (n = 9), or 30 mg/kg (n = 8) of DCS. Sham-injured animals treated with either vehicle (n = 8) or 30 mg/kg of DCS (n = 8) were used for comparison. On days 11-15 post-injury, cognitive function was assessed using the Morris water maze (MWM). Results indicate that the 30 mg/kg dose of DCS significantly attenuated memory deficits as compared to injured vehicle-treated animals (P < 0.01). Analysis also revealed that performance of the injured-DCS (30 mg/kg) group was not significantly different from sham-injured animals treated with vehicle (P > 0.10). In contrast, the 10 mg/kg dose of DCS was ineffective in reducing injury-induced memory deficits. DCS (30 mg/kg) also significantly improved the spatial memory of sham-injured animals when compared with sham-injured animals treated with vehicle (P < 0.05). In conclusion, chronic, post-injury enhancement of the NMDA receptor is an effective strategy for ameliorating TBI-associated cognitive deficits.  相似文献   

4.
We measured CBF and CO2 reactivity after traumatic brain injury (TBI) produced by controlled cortical impact (CCI) using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spin-labeled carotid artery water protons as an endogenous tracer. Fourteen Sprague-Dawley rats divided into TBI (CCI; 4.02 +/- 0.14 m/s velocity; 2.5 mm deformation), sham, and control groups were studied 24 hours after TBI or surgery. Perfusion maps were generated during normocarbia (Paco2 30 to 40 mm Hg) and hypocarbia (PaCO2 15 to 25 mm Hg). During normocarbia, CBF was reduced within a cortical region of interest (ROI, injured versus contralateral) after TBI (200 +/- 82 versus 296 +/- 65 mL.100 g-1.min-1, P < 0.05). Within a contusion-enriched ROI, CBF was reduced after TBI (142 +/- 73 versus 280 +/- 64 mL.100 g-1.min-1, P < 0.05). Cerebral blood flow in the sham group was modestly reduced (212 +/- 112 versus 262 +/- 118 mL.100 g-1.min-1, P < 0.05). Also, TBI widened the distribution of CBF in injured and contralateral cortex. Hypocarbia reduced cortical CBF in control (48%), sham (45%), and TBI rats (48%) versus normocarbia, P < 0.05. In the contusion-enriched ROI, only controls showed a significant reduction in CBF, suggesting blunted CO2 reactivity in the sham and TBI group. CO2 reactivity was reduced in the sham (13%) and TBI (30%) groups within the cortical ROI (versus contralateral cortex). These values were increased twofold within the contusion-enriched ROI but were not statistically significant. After TBI, hypocarbia narrowed the CBF distribution in the injured cortex. We conclude that perfusion MRI using arterial spin-labeling is feasible for the serial, noninvasive measurement of CBF and CO2 reactivity in rats.  相似文献   

5.
The proto-oncogene, BCL-2, has been suggested to participate in cell survival during development of, and after injury to, the CNS. Transgenic (TG) mice overexpressing human Bcl-2 (n = 21) and their wild-type (WT) littermates (n = 18) were subjected to lateral controlled cortical impact brain injury. Lateral controlled cortical impact brain injury resulted in the formation of a contusion in the injured cortex at 2 days, which developed into a well-defined cavity by 7 days in both WT and TG mice. At 7 days after injury, brain-injured TG mice had a significantly reduced cortical lesion (volume = 1.99 mm3) compared with that of the injured WT mice (volume = 5.1 mm3, P < 0.01). In contrast, overexpression of BCL-2 did not affect the extent of hippocampal cell death after lateral controlled cortical impact brain injury. Analysis of motor function revealed that both brain-injured WT and TG mice exhibited significant right-sided deficits at 2 and 7 days after injury (P < 0.05 compared with the uninjured controls). Although composite neuroscores (sum of scores from forelimb and hind limb flexion, lateral pulsion, and inclined plane tests) were not different between WT and TG brain-injured mice, TG mice had a slightly but significantly reduced deficit in the inclined plane test (P < 0.05 compared to the WT mice). These data suggest that the cell death regulatory gene, BCL-2, may play a protective role in the pathophysiology of traumatic brain injury.  相似文献   

6.
A number of experimental studies have reported that moderate hypothermia can produce significant protection against behavioral deficits and/or morphopathological alterations following traumatic brain injury; a Phase 3 clinical trial is currently examining the therapeutic potential for moderate hypothermia (32 degrees C) to improve outcome following severe traumatic brain injury in humans. The current study examined whether hypothermia (32 degrees C) provided behavioral protection following experimental cortical impact injury. The extent of focal cortical contusion was also examined in the same rats. A total of 30 male Sprague-Dawley rats were trained on beam balance and beam walking tasks prior to injury. Under isoflurane anesthesia, cortical impact was produced on the right parietal cortex of 20 rats. Ten rats underwent all surgical procedures but were not impacted (sham-injured rats). Ten of the injured rats were cooled to 32 degrees C (measured in temporalis muscle) beginning 5 min postinjury, maintained for 2 h and rewarmed slowly for 1 h. In the other 10 injured rats, normothermic temperatures (37.5 degrees C) were maintained for the same duration. Beam balance and beam walking performance was assessed daily for 5 days following injury. At 11 days postinjury, rats were assessed for 5 days on acquisition of the Morris water maze task. Following behavioral assessments, rats were perfused and the brain removed. Coronal sections were cut through the site of cortical impact injury and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Hypothermic treatment resulted in significantly less beam balance and beam walking deficits than observed in normothermic rats. Hypothermia also significantly attenuated spatial memory performance deficits. Quantitative morphometric analyses failed to detect any significant differences in volumes of necrotic tissue cavitation in cortices of hypothermic and normothermic rats. Hypothermic treatment also had no effect on volumes of dorsal hippocampal tissue or numbers of cells in CA1 or CA3 regions of the hippocampus. These data suggest that hypothermia, consistent with the reports of others, can produce significant behavioral protection following cortical impact injury that is not necessarily correlated with changes in focal cortical necrosis within the first 15 days following injury.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, a cognitive function of cerebellar networks has been challenging the traditional view of the cerebellum as a motor control centre. Among the cognitive abilities reported to be affected by cerebellar deficits is the capacity to solve a spatial problem. We investigated the influence of a cerebellar lesion on spatial abilities by behavioural analysis of rats that had undergone surgical hemicerebellectomy (HCb; HCbed rats). Experiments were performed with a Morris water maze (MWM) and a water T-maze in both cue and place versions (visible or hidden platform respectively). Results indicate a severe impairment in coping with spatial information in all phases of MWM testing as well as in the T-maze paradigm. However, if the MWM cue phase was prolonged, HCbed rats displayed some ability to learn platform position, although at a level significantly different from controls. They succeeded in finding the platform, even in a pure place paradigm, such as finding a hidden platform with the starting points sequentially changed. Retention testing was also performed, demonstrating that HCb affects acquisition but not retention of spatial information. HCbed animals exhibit such disrupted exploration behaviour that they can display only peripheral circling, and they can acquire spatial relations only when proximal cues are available. Furthermore, in all phases of testing, platform finding for HCbed animals is essentially based on place strategies. Thus, a specific pattern of spatial behaviour, markedly different from that displayed following hippocampal or cortical lesions, characterizes cerebellar lesioned rats. These results are discussed taking into account the role in procedural learning recently assigned to cerebellar networks, demonstrating that the cerebellar circuits represent the keystone of the procedural components of spatial event processing.  相似文献   

8.
Cognitive impairment after traumatic brain injury (TBI) is correlated with decreased cholinergic markers of neuronal viability. The purpose of this experiment was to test the hypothesis that pharmacological activation of the muscarinic cholinergic system during the recovery period after TBI will improve cognitive performance. LU 25-109-T is a partial muscarinic M1 agonist that also acts as an antagonist at presynaptic M2 autoreceptors (thus increasing ACh release). Injured rats were injected subcutaneously daily for 15 days with either 0.0, 3.6, or 15 mumol/kg of LU 25-109-T beginning 24 h after a receiving a moderate (2.1 +/- 0.1 atm) level of central fluid percussion brain injury. Cognitive performance was assessed on days 11-15 postinjury in a Morris water maze (MWM). Injured rats treated with 15 mumol/kg, but not those treated with 3.6 mumol/kg, showed a significant improvement (p < 0.01) in MWM performance as compared with injured vehicle-treated rats. This result supports the hypotheses that a decrease in posttraumatic cholinergic neurotransmission contributes to TBI-induced cognitive deficits and that increasing cholinergic tone during the recovery period following TBI will improve cognitive performance.  相似文献   

9.
The purposes of this study were (1) to document the histopathological consequences of moderate traumatic brain injury (TBI) in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats, and (2) to determine whether post-traumatic brain hypothermia (30 degrees C) would protect histopathologically. Twenty-four hours prior to TBI, the fluid percussion interface was positioned over the right cerebral cortex. On the 2nd day, fasted rats were anesthetized with 70% nitrous oxide, 1% halothane, and 30% oxygen. Under controlled physiological conditions and normothermic brain temperature (37.5 degrees C), rats were injured with a fluid percussion pulse ranging from 1.7 to 2.2 atmospheres. In one group, brain temperature was maintained at normothermic levels for 3 h after injury. In a second group, brain temperature was reduced to 30 degrees C at 5 min post-trauma and maintained for 3 h. Three days after TBI, brains were perfusion-fixed for routine histopathological analysis. In the normothermic group, damage at the site of impact was seen in only one of nine rats. In contrast, all normothermic animals displayed necrotic neurons within ipsilateral cortical regions lateral and remote from the impact site. Intracerebral hemorrhagic contusions were present in all rats at the gray-white interface underlying the injured cortical areas. Selective neuronal necrosis was also present within the CA3 and CA4 hippocampal subsectors and thalamus. Post-traumatic brain hypothermia significantly reduced the overall sum of necrotic cortical neurons (519 +/- 122 vs 952 +/- 130, mean +/- SE, P = 0.03, Kruskal-Wallis test) as well as contusion volume (0.50 +/- 0.14 vs 2.14 +/- 0.71 mm3, P = 0.004).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The exogenous administration of cytidine-5'-diphosphate (CDP)-choline has been used extensively as a brain activator in different neurological disorders that are associated with memory deficits. A total of 50 rats were utilized to (a) determine whether exogenously administered CDP-choline could attenuate posttraumatic motor and spatial memory performance deficits and (b) determine whether intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of CDP-choline increases acetylcholine (ACh) release in the dorsal hippocampus and neocortex. In the behavioral study, traumatic brain injury (TBI) was produced by lateral controlled cortical impact (2-mm deformation/6 m/sec) and administered CDP-choline (100 mg/kg) or saline daily for 18 days beginning 1 day postinjury. At 1 day postinjury, rats treated with CDP-choline 15 min prior to assessment performed significantly better than saline-treated rats. Between 14-18 days postinjury, CDP-choline-treated rats had significantly less cognitive (Morris water maze performance) deficits that injured saline-treated rats. CDP-choline treatment also attenuated the TBI-induced increased sensitivity to the memory-disrupting effects of scopolamine, a muscarinic antagonist. The microdialysis studies demonstrated for the first time that a single i.p. administration of CDP-choline can significantly increase extracellular levels of ACh in dorsal hippocampus and neocortex in normal, awake, freely moving rats. This article provides additional evidence that spatial memory performance deficits are, at least partially, associated with deficits in central cholinergic neurotransmission and that treatments that enhance ACh release in the chronic phase after TBI may attenuate cholinergic-dependent neurobehavioral deficits.  相似文献   

11.
3,3'-Iminodipropionitrile (IDPN) has been reported to disrupt learning and memory in rats (24). The present work addressed the effects of IDPN on tasks requiring the use of spatial information. Separate groups of male rats were dosed with IDPN (IP, in 1 ml/kg saline) for 3 consecutive days and tested in the following procedures: (a) step-through passive avoidance conditioning (0, 100, 150, and 200 mg/kg/day); (b) Morris water maze (MWM) acquisition and retention (0, 125, 150, 175, and 200 mg/kg/day); (c) radial arm maze (RAM) acquisition (0, 100, 200, and 400 mg/kg/day); (d) RAM steady-state performance (0, 200, and 400 mg/kg/day); (e) repeated acquisition in the RAM (0, and 200 mg/kg/day). The vestibular toxicity of IDPN resulted in alterations in spontaneous behavior or swimming deficits in 5 of 8 rats treated with 175 mg/kg/day and in all the animals dosed with 200 or 400 mg/kg/day. IDPN increased step-through PA latencies at 200 mg/kg/day but not at lower doses. In the MWM, no performance deficits were observed at the dose levels preserving the swimming ability of the animals. In both the acquisition and the steady-state RAM tasks, IDPN (400 mg/kg/day) induced an increase in both choice errors and perseverative errors. In the RAM repeated acquisition paradigm, IDPN (200 mg/kg/day) induced performance deficits that included a decreased rate of within-session reduction in errors. The present data show that IDPN disrupts performance of tasks requiring spatial learning and memory and indicate that these deficits can be in part caused by an acquisition deficit.  相似文献   

12.
Clinical studies have demonstrated that patients sustain prolonged behavioral deficits following traumatic brain injury, in some cases culminating in the cognitive and histopathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease. However, few studies have examined the long-term consequences of experimental traumatic brain injury. In the present study, anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 185) were subjected to severe lateral fluid-percussion brain injury (n = 115) or sham injury (n = 70) and evaluated up to one year post-injury for cognitive and neurological deficits and histopathological changes. Compared with sham-injured controls, brain-injured animals showed a spatial learning impairment that persisted up to one year post-injury. In addition, deficits in specific neurologic motor function tasks also persisted up to one year post-injury. Immunohistochemistry using multiple antibodies to the amyloid precursor protein and/or amyloid precursor protein-like proteins revealed novel axonal degeneration in the striatum, corpus callosum and injured cortex up to one year post-injury and in the thalamus up to six months post-injury. Histologic evaluation of injured brains demonstrated a progressive expansion of the cortical cavity, enlargement of the lateral ventricles, deformation of the hippocampus, and thalamic calcifications. Taken together, these findings indicate that experimental traumatic brain injury can cause long-term cognitive and neurologic motor dysfunction accompanied by continuing neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

13.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) results in chronic derangements in central cholinergic neurotransmission that may contribute to posttraumatic memory deficits. Intraventricular cannula (IVC) nerve growth factor (NGF) infusion can reduce axotomy-induced spatial memory deficits and morphologic changes observed in medial septal cholinergic neurons immunostained for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). We examined the efficacy of NGF to (1) ameliorate reduced posttraumatic spatial memory performance, (2) release of hippocampal acetylcholine (ACh), and (3) ChAT immunoreactivity in the rat medial septum. Rats (n = 36) were trained prior to TBI on the functional tasks and retested on Days 1-5 (motor) and on Day 7 (memory retention). Immediately following injury, an IVC and osmotic pump were implanted, and NGF or vehicle was infused for 7 days. While there were no differences in motor performance, the NGF-treated group had significantly better spatial memory retention (P < 0.05) than the vehicle-treated group. The IVC cannula was then removed on Day 7, and a microdialysis probe was placed into the dorsal hippocampus. After a 22-h equilibration period, samples were collected prior to and after administration of scopolamine (1 mg/kg), which evoked ACh release by blocking autoreceptors. The posttraumatic reduction in scopolamine-evoked ACh release was completely reversed with NGF. Injury produced a bilateral reduction in the number and cross-sectional area of ChAT immunopositive medial septal neurons that was reversed by NGF treatment. These data suggest that cognitive but not motor deficits following TBI are, in part, mediated by chronic deficits in cholinergic systems that can be modulated by neurotrophic factors such as NGF.  相似文献   

14.
This study utilized a unilateral controlled cortical impact model of traumatic brain injury to assess disruptions of synaptic homeostasis following trauma. Adult rats were subjected to a moderate (2 mm) cortical deformation and synaptosomes were prepared from the entire ipsilateral (injured) hemisphere or dissected into different regions (hippocampus, injured cortical area including penumbra, residual hemisphere) at various times postinjury (10 and 30 min, and 1, 6, and 24 h). Synaptosomes from the corresponding regions of the contralateral hemisphere were used as controls to assess alterations in synaptic ATP levels, lipid peroxidation, and glutamate and glucose transport. The results demonstrate significant time-dependent alterations in synaptic homeostasis, which included an immediate reduction in ATP levels, coupled with a significant increase in lipid peroxidation within 30 min postinjury. Lipid peroxidation demonstrated a biphasic response with elevations observed 24 h postinjury, a time at which decreases in glutamate and glucose transport occurred. These results suggest that disruption of synaptic homeostasis is an extremely early event following trauma that should be considered when designing pharmacological interventions.  相似文献   

15.
A mouse model of traumatic brain injury was developed using a device that produces controlled cortical impact (CCI), permitting independent manipulation of tissue deformation and impact velocity. The left parietotemporal cortex was subjected to CCI [1 mm tissue deformation and 4.5 m/s tip velocity (mild), or 6.0 m/s (moderate)] or sham surgery. Injured animals showed delayed recovery of pedal withdrawal and righting reflexes compared to sham-operated controls. Significant severity-related deficits in forepaw contraflexion and performance on a rotarod device were evident for up to 7 days. Using a beam walking task to measure fine motor coordination, pronounced deficits were apparent for at least 2 and 4 weeks following mild and moderate CCI, respectively. Cognitive function was evaluated using the water maze. Impairment of place learning, related to injury severity, was observed in mice trained 7-10 days following CCI. Similarly, working memory deficits were evident in a variation of this task when examined 21-23 days postinjury. Mild CCI caused necrosis of subcortical white matter with minimal damage to somatosensory cortex. Moderate CCI produced extensive cortical and subcortical white matter damage. Triple fluorescence labeling with terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL), antineuronal nuclear protein (NeuN), and Hoechst 33258 of parallel sections showed frequent apoptotic neurons. These findings demonstrate sustained and reproducible deficits in sensory/motor function and spatial learning in the CCI-injured mouse correlating with injury severity. Mechanisms of neuronal cell death after trauma as well as strategies for evaluating novel pharmacological treatment strategies may be identified using this model.  相似文献   

16.
We recently demonstrated that posttraumatic administration of the N-type calcium channel blocker SNX-111 (S) and a novel blood-brain barrier penetrating antioxidant U-101033E (U), significantly alleviated mitochondrial dysfunction induced by traumatic brain injury (TBI) in rats. The present study was designed to determine whether a combination of S and U, which act on different biochemical mechanisms of secondary brain injury, would be more efficacious than either drug alone. Brain mitochondria from injured and uninjured hemispheres were isolated and examined at 12 h post TBI induced by a severe controlled cortical impact injury. S at 1.0 mg/kg significantly increased both State 3 and 4 rates and produced a slight increase in P/O ratio, and there was virtually no change in RCI. U at 1.0 mg/kg did not show any protection. However, the combined treatment of S at 1.0 mg/kg and U at 1.0 mg/kg eliminated the uncoupling effect of S, and restored not only State 3 rates and P/O ratios but also RCI to near sham values. These results provide further evidence that both reactive oxygen species and perturbation of cellular calcium homeostasis participate in the pathogenesis of TBI-induced mitochondrial dysfunction, and support the idea of using combined therapy with lower drug doses.  相似文献   

17.
This study employed in vivo microdialysis in awake, freely-moving Sprague-Dawley rats to examine acetylcholine (ACh) release in the dorsal hippocampus at 14 days following lateral controlled cortical impact. Extracellular levels of ACh were measured prior to and after an intraperitoneal administration of scopolamine (1 mg/kg), which evokes ACh release by blocking autoreceptors. At 14 days post injury there were no differences in basal ACh levels. However, injury produced a significant reduction in scopolamine-evoked ACh release. The data suggest that cholinergic neurotransmission remains chronically compromised, and thus may contribute to previously documented post traumatic spatial memory deficits.  相似文献   

18.
Delayed Wallerian degeneration after neuronal injury is a feature of the C57BL/Wld(s) mouse mutant. In the present study, we examined the effect of unilateral controlled cortical impact (CCI) on motor and cognitive performance in C57BL/6 and C57BL/Wld(s) mice. Performance on a beam-walking task was impaired in both injured groups over the first 3 weeks; however, between 28 and 35 days post injury, C57BL/6 mice continued to improve whereas C57BL/Wld(s) mice showed increased footfaults. In a spatial learning task, C57BL/Wld(s) animals performed consistently better than C57BL/6 mice when tested 7-10 days and 14-17 days following CCI. C57BL/Wld(s) mice also demonstrated improved working memory performance as compared with C57BL/6 mice when trained on days 21-22 after injury; this effect was lost on days 23 and 24, and was not evident in other animals tested in the same task at 28-31 days following injury. These results indicate a marked delay in motor and cognitive impairment following CCI in C57BL/Wld(s) mice compared with injured C57BL/6 controls. This is consistent with previous work showing delayed temporal evolution of neuronal degeneration in C57BL/Wld(s) mice and suggests CCI may be a suitable model for examining the functional consequences of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in genetically altered mice.  相似文献   

19.
Adenosine is a putative neuroprotectant in ischemia, but its role after traumatic brain injury (TBI) is not clear. Metabolites of adenosine, particularly inosine and hypoxanthine, are markers of ischemia and energy failure. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) breakdown early after injury and metabolism of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) are potential sources of adenosine. Further delineation of the magnitude, location, time course, and source of production of adenosine after TBI is needed. We measured adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine in brain interstitial fluid after controlled cortical impact (CCI) in the rat. Rats (n = 15) were prepared for TBI induced by CCI. A microdialysis probe was placed in the cortex, and samples were collected every 10 min. After 3 h of equilibration, the catheter was removed, CCI was performed (4 m/sec, depth 2.5 mm), and the catheter was replaced. In the shams, the catheter was removed and replaced without CCI. The injury group included rats (n = 10) subjected to CCI. Within the injury group, the microdialysis probe was placed in the center of the eventual contusion (center, n = 5) or in the penumbral region (penumbra, n = 5). Purine metabolites were measured using ultraviolet-based high-pressure liquid chromatography. Adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine were dramatically increased after injury (61-fold, 37-fold, and 16-fold, respectively sham, all p < 0.05, two-way analysis of variance for repeated measures). No changes in cAMP were observed (p = 0.62 vs. sham). Adenosine peaked in the first 20 min and returned to near baseline 40 min, whereas inosine and hypoxanthine peaked at 30 min and remained increased for 40 min after CCI. Interstitial brain adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine were increased early after CCI in rats in the contusion and penumbra. ATP breakdown is a potential source of adenosine in this early period while metabolism of cAMP does not appear to play a role. Confirmation of these data in humans may suggest new strategies targeting this important metabolic pathway.  相似文献   

20.
Longitudinal patterns of functional deficits were investigated in 37 children with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), 40 children with moderate TBI, and 44 children with orthopedic injuries. They were from 6 to 12 years of age when injured. Their neuropsychological, behavioral, adaptive, and academic functioning were assessed at 6 months, 12 months, and 3–5 years postinjury. Functional deficits (  相似文献   

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