Impaired Behavioral and Pathological Outcomes Following Blast Neurotrauma

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Date
2013-08-30
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Publisher
Virginia Tech
Abstract

Blast-induced neurotrauma (BINT) is a major societal concern due to the complex expression of neuropathological disorders after exposure to blast. Disruptions in neuronal function, proximal in time to the blast exposure, may eventually contribute to the late emergence of the clinical deficits. Besides complications with differential clinical diagnosis, the biomolecular mechanism underlying BINT that gives rise to cognitive deficits is poorly understood. Some pre-clinical studies have demonstrated cognitive deficits at an acute stage following blast overpressure (BOP) exposure. However, the behavioral deficit type (e.g., short term memory) and the mechanism underlying injury prognosis that onsets the cognitive deficits remains to be further investigated. An established rodent model of blast neurotrauma was used in order to study impaired behavioral and neuropathological outcomes following blast. Anesthetized rats were exposed to a calibrated BOP using a blast simulator while control animals were not exposed to BOP. Behavioral changes in short term memory and anxiety were assessed with standard behavioral techniques (novel objected recognition paradigm and light and dark box test) at acute and chronic stages (range: 3 hours -- 3 months). In addition, brains were assayed for neurochemical changes using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and neuropathology with immunohistochemistry in cognitive regions of brain (hippocampus, amygdala, frontal cortex and nucleus accumbens)

Early metabolic changes and oxidative stress were observed along with a compromise in energy metabolism associated with sub-acute (7 days following BOP exposure) active neurodegeneration and glial scarring. Data suggested GABA shunting pathway was activated and phospholipase A2 regulated arachadonic acid pathway may be involved in cellular death cascades. In addition, increased myo-inositol levels in medial pre-frontal cortex (PFC) further supported the glial scarring and were associated with impaired working memory at a sub-acute stage (7 days) following BOP exposure. Chronic working memory issues and anxiety associated behavior could be related to chronic activation of microglia in hippocampus and astrocytes in amygdala respectively. Furthermore, these results from MRS could be directly translated into clinical studies to provide a valuable insight into diagnosis of BINT, and it is speculated that gliosis associated markers (myo-inositol) may be a potential biomarker for blast-induced memory impairment.

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Keywords
Blast, neurotrauma, Memory, anxiety, glial scarring
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