AI Article Synopsis

  • Long-term hypothermia (33 °C) was studied in rats with traumatic brain injury (TBI) to determine its optimal duration and effects on intracranial pressure (ICP) and neurological recovery.
  • The research found that while 4 and 24 hours of hypothermia led to ICP rebound, 48 hours of hypothermia significantly reduced ICP rebound and enhanced neuroprotection.
  • Key improvements from 48 hours of hypothermia included better neurological function, decreased brain edema, reduced blood-brain barrier permeability, and regulation of inflammation and neurogenesis.

Article Abstract

Long-term hypothermia has been reported to prevent intracranial pressure (ICP) rebound in clinical patients, but the duration for hypothermia and the corresponding ICP data are not available. This study investigated the optimal duration of long-term hypothermia in traumatic brain injury (TBI) rats, and observed the effect on ICP and neurological function. In this study, we established a rat severe TBI model with electronic Controlled Cortical Injury device, and implemented hypothermia (33 °C) for different durations. The motor function of the rats in each group was evaluated by beam walking test and inclined-grid climbing test, brain water content was calculated by the wet-dry weight method, Evan's blue staining was used to measure the blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability, the change of hippocampal neurons was observed by Nissl staining, the expressions of BrdU, NeuN, and CD86 positive cells were detected by immunofluorescence staining, and the expressions of Bcl-2, Bax, iNOS, IL-10, and Arg-1 were detected by Western blot. We found that therapeutic hypothermia improved neurological recovery after TBI with declining ICP, reducing brain edema, decreasing BBB permeability, promoting neurogenesis, inhibiting apoptosis, and regulating inflammation. Moreover, 48 h hypothermia amplified the neuroprotective effect after injury on the basis of 4 or 24 h hypothermic treatment. Both 4 and 24 h hypothermia led to ICP rebound during or after rewarming, whereas 48 h hypothermia completely abolished ICP rebound. Our study suggests that long-term hypothermia amplifies neuroprotection after TBI by antagonizing ICP rebound.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/WNR.0000000000002106DOI Listing

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