Electromagnetic Controlled Closed-Head Model of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Mice.

J Vis Exp

Spinal Cord & Brain Injury Research Center, University of Kentucky; Department of Neuroscience, University of Kentucky; Sanders-Brown Center on Aging, University of Kentucky;

Published: September 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The manuscript discusses the need for reliable animal models of traumatic brain injury (TBI) to improve therapeutic testing and understand brain function changes.
  • It introduces a mouse model of mild TBI resulting from a midline closed head injury (CHI), which doesn’t cause structural brain damage but still leads to measurable cognitive impairment after one month.
  • A detailed protocol for inducing CHI in mice is provided, highlighting its reproducibility and low mortality, while noting the model’s ability to be complementary to more severe TBI models.

Article Abstract

Highly reproducible animal models of traumatic brain injury (TBI), with well-defined pathologies, are needed for testing therapeutic interventions and understanding the mechanisms of how a TBI alters brain function. The availability of multiple animal models of TBI is necessary to model the different aspects and severities of TBI seen in people. This manuscript describes the use of a midline closed head injury (CHI) to develop a mouse model of mild TBI. The model is considered mild because it does not produce structural brain lesions based on neuroimaging or gross neuronal loss. However, a single impact creates enough pathology that cognitive impairment is measurable at least 1 month after injury. A step-by-step protocol to induce a CHI in mice using a stereotaxically guided electromagnetic impactor is defined in the paper. The benefits of the mild midline CHI model include the reproducibility of the injury-induced changes with low mortality. The model has been temporally characterized up to 1 year after the injury for neuroimaging, neurochemical, neuropathological, and behavioral changes. The model is complementary to open skull models of controlled cortical impact using the same impactor device. Thus, labs can model both mild diffuse TBI and focal moderate-to-severe TBI with the same impactor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10550048PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/64556DOI Listing

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