AI Article Synopsis

  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) leads to significant health issues, and this study evaluates the impact of xenon treatment on recovery in rats with severe TBI.
  • Xenon treatment showed promising results by reducing brain lesion size, improving movement abilities, and minimizing neuronal loss within critical brain areas.
  • The treatment also increased certain inflammatory cells, indicating that early beneficial neuroinflammation may play a role in xenon's neuroprotective effects, suggesting its potential as a clinical treatment for brain trauma.

Article Abstract

Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, but there are no clinically proven treatments that specifically target neuronal loss and secondary injury development following TBI. In this study, we evaluate the effect of xenon treatment on functional outcome, lesion volume, neuronal loss and neuroinflammation after severe TBI in rats.

Methods: Young adult male Sprague Dawley rats were subjected to controlled cortical impact (CCI) brain trauma or sham surgery followed by treatment with either 50% xenon:25% oxygen balance nitrogen, or control gas 75% nitrogen:25% oxygen. Locomotor function was assessed using Catwalk-XT automated gait analysis at baseline and 24 h after injury. Histological outcomes were assessed following perfusion fixation at 15 min or 24 h after injury or sham procedure.

Results: Xenon treatment reduced lesion volume, reduced early locomotor deficits, and attenuated neuronal loss in clinically relevant cortical and subcortical areas. Xenon treatment resulted in significant increases in Iba1-positive microglia and GFAP-positive reactive astrocytes that was associated with neuronal preservation.

Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that xenon improves functional outcome and reduces neuronal loss after brain trauma in rats. Neuronal preservation was associated with a xenon-induced enhancement of microglial cell numbers and astrocyte activation, consistent with a role for early beneficial neuroinflammation in xenon's neuroprotective effect. These findings suggest that xenon may be a first-line clinical treatment for brain trauma.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7691958PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-03373-9DOI Listing

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