AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how exposure to a blast wave can lead to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in rats, affecting cognition and behavior.
  • Researchers used a compressed air shock tube to expose rats to a controlled blast and found no significant changes in motor performance or common brain injury markers two weeks later.
  • However, rats showed cognitive impairment in an object recognition task and had a noticeable shortening of the axon initial segment in their brains, suggesting neuronal changes that may affect brain function after a blast.

Article Abstract

Exposure to a blast wave has been proposed to cause mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), with symptoms including altered cognition, memory, and behavior. This idea, however, remains controversial, and the mechanisms of blast-induced brain injury remain unknown. To begin to resolve these questions, we constructed a simple compressed air shock tube, placed rats inside the tube, and exposed them to a highly reproducible and controlled blast wave. Consistent with the generation of a mild injury, 2 weeks after exposure to the blast, we found that motor performance was unaffected, and a panel of common injury markers showed little or no significant changes in expression in the cortex, corpus callosum, or hippocampus. Similarly, we were unable to detect elevated spectrin breakdown products in brains collected from blast-exposed rats. Using an object recognition task, however, we found that rats exposed to a blast wave spent significantly less time exploring a novel object when compared with control rats. Intriguingly, we also observed a significant shortening of the axon initial segment (AIS) in both the cortex and hippocampus of blast-exposed rats, suggesting altered neuronal excitability after exposure to a blast. A computational model showed that shortening the AIS increased both threshold and the interspike interval of repetitively firing neurons. These results support the conclusion that exposure to a single blast wave can lead to mTBI with accompanying cognitive impairment and subcellular changes in the molecular organization of neurons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3941920PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2012.2478DOI Listing

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