Projects per year
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major contributor to death and disability worldwide. Children are at particularly high risk of both sustaining a TBI and experiencing serious long-term consequences, such as cognitive deficits, mental health problems and post-traumatic epilepsy. Severe TBI patients are highly susceptible to nosocomial infections, which are mostly acquired within the first week of hospitalization post-TBI. Yet the potential chronic impact of such acute infections following pediatric TBI remains unclear. In this study, we hypothesized that a peripheral immune challenge, such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS)—mimicking a hospital-acquired infection—would worsen inflammatory, neurobehavioral, and seizure outcomes after experimental pediatric TBI. To test this, three-week old male C57Bl/6J mice received a moderate controlled cortical impact or sham surgery, followed by 1 mg/kg i.p. LPS (or 0.9% saline vehicle) at 4 days TBI. Mice were randomized to four groups; sham-saline, sham-LPS, TBI-saline or TBI-LPS (n = 15/group). Reduced general activity and increased anxiety-like behavior were observed within 24 h in LPS-treated mice, indicating a transient sickness response. LPS-treated mice also exhibited a reduction in body weights, which persisted chronically. From 2 months post-injury, mice underwent a battery of tests for sensorimotor, cognitive, and psychosocial behaviors. TBI resulted in hyperactivity and spatial memory deficits, independent of LPS; whereas LPS resulted in subtle deficits in spatial memory retention. At 5 months post-injury, video-electroencephalographic recordings were obtained to evaluate both spontaneous seizure activity as well as the evoked seizure response to pentylenetetrazol (PTZ). TBI increased susceptibility to PTZ-evoked seizures; whereas LPS appeared to increase the incidence of spontaneous seizures. Post-mortem analyses found that TBI, but not LPS, resulted in robust glial reactivity and loss of cortical volume. A TBI × LPS interaction in hippocampal volume suggested that TBI-LPS mice had a subtle increase in ipsilateral hippocampus tissue loss; however, this was not reflected in neuronal cell counts. Both TBI and LPS independently had modest effects on chronic hippocampal gene expression. Together, contrary to our hypothesis, we observed minimal synergy between TBI and LPS. Instead, pediatric TBI and a subsequent transient immune challenge independently influenced chronic outcomes. These findings have implications for future preclinical modeling as well as acute post-injury patient management.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 29-47 |
Number of pages | 19 |
Journal | Brain, Behavior, and Immunity |
Volume | 100 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Feb 2022 |
Keywords
- Behavior
- Epilepsy
- Inflammation
- Lipopolysaccharide
- Neurotrauma
- Seizures
Projects
- 3 Finished
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Developing new treatments and identifying biomarkers to enable transformational, precision medicine based care for patients with drug resistant epilepsy
O'Brien, T. (Primary Chief Investigator (PCI))
NHMRC - National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia)
1/01/20 → 31/12/24
Project: Research
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Long-term outcomes after paediatric traumatic brain injury
Semple, B. (Primary Chief Investigator (PCI))
NHMRC - National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia)
1/01/18 → 31/07/22
Project: Research
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Investigating treatments and biomarkers of brain concussion
Shultz, S. (Primary Chief Investigator (PCI))
1/11/17 → 31/12/18
Project: Research