Publications by authors named "Audrey Lafrenaye"

Background/objectives: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a global healthcare concern affecting millions, with wide-ranging symptoms including sensory and behavioral changes that can persist long-term. Due to similarities with human brain cytoarchitecture and inflammation, minipig models are advantageous for translational TBI research. However, gaps in knowledge exist regarding their behavioral and sensory sequelae following injury.

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Article Synopsis
  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious health issue that affects many people and is expensive to treat.
  • Researchers often use rats in experiments to study TBI and give them pain relief medicine like buprenorphine to help manage pain.
  • This study showed that rats given a specific type of buprenorphine (bup-SR-LAB) experienced more weight loss and had to be euthanized sooner compared to those given another type (bup-SR-HCl), helping scientists understand how different pain medicines affect research outcomes.
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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions globally, with a majority of TBI cases being classified as mild, in which diffuse pathologies prevail. Two of the pathological hallmarks of TBI are diffuse axonal injury (DAI) and microglial activation. While progress has been made investigating the breadth of TBI-induced axonal injury and microglial changes in rodents, the neuroinflammatory progression and interaction between microglia and injured axons in humans is less well understood.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions globally, with a majority of TBI cases being classified as mild, in which diffuse pathologies prevail. Two of the pathological hallmarks of TBI are diffuse axonal injury and microglial activation. While progress has been made investigating the breadth of TBI-induced axonal injury and microglial changes in rodents, the neuroinflammatory progression and interaction between microglia and injured axons following brain injury in humans is less well understood.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions of people each year. Previous studies using the central fluid percussion injury (CFPI) model in adult male rats indicated that elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) was associated with long-term effects, including neuronal cell loss and increased sensory sensitivity post-injury and secondary ICP elevation, which were not seen following injury alone. Investigations also indicated that cathepsin B (Cath B), a lysosomal cysteine protease, may play a role in the pathological progression of neuronal membrane disruption; however, the specific impact of Cath B inhibition following CFPI remained unknown.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions of people annually; however, our knowledge of the diffuse pathologies associated with TBI is limited. As diffuse pathologies, including axonal injury and neuroinflammatory changes, are difficult to visualize in the clinical population, animal models are used. In the current study, we used the central fluid percussion injury (CFPI) model in a micro pig to study the potential scalability of these diffuse pathologies in a gyrencephalic brain of a species with inflammatory systems very similar to humans.

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Neurologic morbidity is highly prevalent in pediatric critical illness, and the use of benzodiazepines and/or opioids is a risk factor for delirium and post-discharge sequelae. However, little is known about how multidrug sedation with these medications interacts with inflammation in the developing brain, a frequent condition during childhood critical illness that has not been extensively studied. In weanling rats, mild-moderate inflammation was induced with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on postnatal day (P)18 and combined with 3 days repeated opioid and benzodiazepine sedation using morphine and midazolam (MorMdz) between P19-21.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major leading cause of death and disability. While previous studies regarding focal pathologies following TBI have been done, there is a lack of information concerning the role of analgesics and their influences on injury pathology. Buprenorphine (Bup), an opioid analgesic, is a commonly used analgesic in experimental TBI models.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has consequences that last for years following injury. While TBI can precipitate a variety of diffuse pathologies, the mechanisms involved in injury-induced neuronal membrane disruption remain elusive. The lysosomal cysteine protease, Cathepsin B (Cath B), and specifically its redistribution into the cytosol has been implicated in cell death.

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Diffuse brain injury is better described as multi-focal, where pathology can be found adjacent to seemingly uninjured neural tissue. In experimental diffuse brain injury, pathology and pathophysiology have been reported far more lateral than predicted by the impact site. We hypothesized that local thickening of the rodent skull at the temporal ridges serves to focus the intracranial mechanical forces experienced during brain injury and generate predictable pathology.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a common phenomenon, accounting for significant cost and adverse health effects. While there is information about focal pathologies following TBI, knowledge of more diffuse processes is lacking, particularly regarding how analgesics affect this pathology. As buprenorphine is the most commonly used analgesic in experimental TBI models, this study investigated the acute effects of the opioid analgesic buprenorphine (Bup-SR-Lab) on diffuse neuronal/glial pathology, neuroinflammation, cell damage, and systemic physiology.

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Loss of plasmalemmal integrity may mediate cell death after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Prior studies in controlled cortical impact (CCI) indicated that the membrane resealing agent Kollidon VA64 improved histopathological and functional outcomes. Kollidon VA64 was therefore selected as the seventh therapy tested by the Operation Brain Trauma Therapy consortium, across three pre-clinical TBI rat models: parasagittal fluid percussion injury (FPI), CCI, and penetrating ballistic-like brain injury (PBBI).

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Operation brain trauma therapy (OBTT) is a drug- and biomarker-screening consortium intended to improve the quality of preclinical studies and provide a rigorous framework to increase the translational potential of experimental traumatic brain injury (TBI) treatments. Levetiracetam (LEV) is an antiepileptic agent that was the fifth drug tested by OBTT in three independent rodent models of moderate to severe TBI. To date, LEV has been the most promising drug tested by OBTT and was therefore advanced to testing in the pig.

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Article Synopsis
  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a complex condition with varying causes and effects, making it difficult for researchers to achieve consistent results in both pre-clinical and clinical settings.
  • To tackle this issue, TBI research groups created 913 common data elements (CDEs) that standardize experimental parameters, animal characteristics, and injury models, aimed at improving data consistency and analysis across studies.
  • An analysis of combined legacy datasets revealed significant missing data issues, with around 35% missing values in the Morris water maze and 33% in the Rotarod experiments, highlighting the challenges yet to be overcome in harmonizing research efforts.
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Glibenclamide (GLY) is the sixth drug tested by the Operation Brain Trauma Therapy (OBTT) consortium based on substantial pre-clinical evidence of benefit in traumatic brain injury (TBI). Adult Sprague-Dawley rats underwent fluid percussion injury (FPI;  = 45), controlled cortical impact (CCI;  = 30), or penetrating ballistic-like brain injury (PBBI;  = 36). Efficacy of GLY treatment (10-μg/kg intraperitoneal loading dose at 10 min post-injury, followed by a continuous 7-day subcutaneous infusion [0.

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Serum biomarkers are promising tools for evaluating patients following traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, their relationship with diffuse histopathology remains unclear. Additionally, translatability is a focus of neurotrauma research, however, studies using translational animal models are limited.

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Microglia dynamically interact with neurons influencing the development, structure, and function of neuronal networks. Recent studies suggest microglia may also influence neuronal activity by physically interacting with axonal domains responsible for action potential initiation and propagation. However, the nature of these microglial process interactions is not well understood.

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The repercussions of traumatic brain injury (TBI) endure years following the initial insult and involve chronic impairments/disabilities. Studies indicate that these morbidities stem from diffuse pathologies, however, knowledge regarding TBI-mediated diffuse pathologies, and in particular, diffuse neuronal membrane disruption, is limited. Membrane disruption has been shown to occur acutely following injury, primarily within neurons, however, the progression of TBI-induced membrane disruption remains undefined.

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Brain swelling is one of the most robust predictors of outcome following brain injury, including ischemic, traumatic, hemorrhagic, metabolic or other injury. Depending on the specific type of insult, brain swelling can arise from the combined space-occupying effects of extravasated blood, extracellular edema fluid, cellular swelling, vascular engorgement and hydrocephalus. Of these, arguably the least well appreciated is cellular swelling.

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Interactions between microglia and neuronal components are important for normal CNS function. They are also associated with neuroinflammation and many pathological processes and several studies have explored these interactions in terms of phagocytic engulfment. Much progress has also been made in understanding the consequences of chronic neuroinflammatory changes following trauma.

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Current approaches have failed to yield success in the translation of neuroprotective therapies from the pre-clinical to the clinical arena for traumatic brain injury (TBI). Numerous explanations have been put forth in both the pre-clinical and clinical arenas. Operation Brain Trauma Therapy (OBTT), a pre-clinical therapy and biomarker screening consortium has, to date, evaluated 10 therapies and assessed three serum biomarkers in nearly 1,500 animals across three rat models and a micro pig model of TBI.

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Operation brain trauma therapy (OBTT) is a multi-center, pre-clinical drug and biomarker screening consortium for traumatic brain injury (TBI). Therapies are screened across three rat models (parasagittal fluid percussion injury, controlled cortical impact [CCI], and penetrating ballistic-like brain injury). Operation brain trauma therapy seeks to define therapies that show efficacy across models that should have the best chance in randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and/or to define model-dependent therapeutic effects, including TBI protein biomarker responses, to guide precision medicine-based clinical trials in targeted pathologies.

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a prevalent disease with significant costs. Although progress has been made in understanding the complex pathobiology of focal lesions associated with TBI, questions remain regarding the diffuse responses to injury. Expression of the transient receptor potential melastatin 4 (Trpm4) channel is linked to cytotoxic edema during hemorrhagic contusion expansion.

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