AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydrocephalus is a neurological disorder in children that causes the brain's ventricles to enlarge, impacting cerebrospinal fluid flow and absorption, leading to cognitive issues.
  • Researchers used a kaolin-induced hydrocephalus model in rats and found that it negatively affected cognitive performance, specifically in tasks related to navigation and memory.
  • Detailed brain analysis revealed reduced volumes and distorted pyramidal neurons in key brain areas (cortex and hippocampus), along with diminished dendritic structures and lower levels of proteins important for synaptic connectivity, potentially explaining the observed learning and memory deficits.

Article Abstract

Hydrocephalus is a common neurological disorder in children characterized by abnormal dilation of cerebral ventricles as a result of the impairment of cerebrospinal fluid flow or absorption. Clinical presentation of hydrocephalus varies with chronicity and often shows cognitive dysfunction. Here we used a kaolin-induction method in rats and studied the effects of hydrocephalus on cerebral cortex and hippocampus, the two regions highly related to cognition. Hydrocephalus impaired rats' performance in Morris water maze task. Serial three-dimensional reconstruction from sections of the whole brain freshly froze in situ with skull shows that the volumes of both structures were reduced. Morphologically, pyramidal neurons of the somatosensory cortex and hippocampus appear to be distorted. Intracellular dye injection and subsequent three-dimensional reconstruction and analyses revealed that the dendritic arbors of layer III and V cortical pyramid neurons were reduced. The total dendritic length of CA1, but not CA3, pyramidal neurons was also reduced. Dendritic spine densities on both cortical and hippocampal pyramidal neurons were decreased, consistent with our concomitant findings that the expressions of both synaptophysin and postsynaptic density protein 95 were reduced. These cortical and hippocampal changes suggest reductions of excitatory connectivity, which could underlie the learning and memory deficits in hydrocephalus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8029119PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bpa.12414DOI Listing

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