Evaluation of early chronic functional outcomes and their relationship to pre-frontal cortex and hippocampal pathology following moderate-severe traumatic brain injury

评估中度至重度创伤性脑损伤后的早期慢性功能结果及其与前额叶皮质和海马病理的关系

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作者:Alina Arulsamy, Jason Teng, Holly Colton, Frances Corrigan, Lyndsey Collins-Praino

Abstract

TBI is a significant risk factor for the development of dementia, with the interaction between structural damage from TBI and neuroinflammation potentially driving this relationship. This study investigated the early chronic post-TBI neuroinflammatory response and its relationship to both neurodegenerative pathology and functional impairment up to 3 months post-injury. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent either sham surgery or the Marmarou model of diffuse moderate-severe TBI. At 1-month and 3-months post-injury, a functional battery encompassing motor function, depressive-like behaviour, anxiety and cognition was performed. Western blot and immunohistochemical analysis assessed a range of inflammatory, neurodegenerative and oxidative stress markers. At both 1 and 3-months post injury, depressive-like behaviour was significantly increased in TBI animals, with TBI animals also exhibiting impaired cognitive flexibility at 3 months, although learning and memory remained intact. This was accompanied by a significant decrease in markers of synaptic integrity and astrocytic and microglia number within the pre-frontal cortex at 1-month post-injury, although this resolved by 3-months post-injury. In contrast, minimal pathology was evident within the hippocampus at 1 month, with only a decrease in neurofilament-light seen at 3 months post-injury. Thus, following a moderate-severe diffuse injury, the pre-frontal cortex is most vulnerable to early neuro-structural changes. While these changes are resolved at 3 months post-injury, future studies should investigate whether they re-emerge or progress to other areas, such as the hippocampus, at later time points, which could predispose individuals to the development of dementia.

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