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Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe

With the rapid increase in the number of blast induced traumatic brain injuries and associated neuropsychological consequences in veterans returning from the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, the need to better understand the neuropathological sequelae following exposure to an open field blast exp...

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Autores principales: Kallakuri, Srinivasu, Desai, Alok, Feng, Ke, Tummala, Sharvani, Saif, Tal, Chen, Chaoyang, Zhang, Liying, Cavanaugh, John M., King, Albert I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5249202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28107370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169239
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author Kallakuri, Srinivasu
Desai, Alok
Feng, Ke
Tummala, Sharvani
Saif, Tal
Chen, Chaoyang
Zhang, Liying
Cavanaugh, John M.
King, Albert I.
author_facet Kallakuri, Srinivasu
Desai, Alok
Feng, Ke
Tummala, Sharvani
Saif, Tal
Chen, Chaoyang
Zhang, Liying
Cavanaugh, John M.
King, Albert I.
author_sort Kallakuri, Srinivasu
collection PubMed
description With the rapid increase in the number of blast induced traumatic brain injuries and associated neuropsychological consequences in veterans returning from the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, the need to better understand the neuropathological sequelae following exposure to an open field blast exposure is still critical. Although a large body of experimental studies have attempted to address these pathological changes using shock tube models of blast injury, studies directed at understanding changes in a gyrencephalic brain exposed to a true open field blast are limited and thus forms the focus of this study. Anesthetized, male Yucatan swine were subjected to forward facing medium blast overpressure (peak side on overpressure 224–332 kPa; n = 7) or high blast overpressure (peak side on overpressure 350–403 kPa; n = 5) by detonating 3.6 kg of composition-4 charge. Sham animals (n = 5) were subjected to all the conditions without blast exposure. After a 3-day survival period, the brain was harvested and sections from the frontal lobes were processed for histological assessment of neuronal injury and glial reactivity changes. Significant neuronal injury in the form of beta amyloid precursor protein immunoreactive zones in the gray and white matter was observed in the frontal lobe sections from both the blast exposure groups. A significant increase in the number of astrocytes and microglia was also observed in the blast exposed sections compared to sham sections. We postulate that the observed acute injury changes may progress to chronic periods after blast and may contribute to short and long-term neuronal degeneration and glial mediated inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-52492022017-02-06 Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe Kallakuri, Srinivasu Desai, Alok Feng, Ke Tummala, Sharvani Saif, Tal Chen, Chaoyang Zhang, Liying Cavanaugh, John M. King, Albert I. PLoS One Research Article With the rapid increase in the number of blast induced traumatic brain injuries and associated neuropsychological consequences in veterans returning from the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, the need to better understand the neuropathological sequelae following exposure to an open field blast exposure is still critical. Although a large body of experimental studies have attempted to address these pathological changes using shock tube models of blast injury, studies directed at understanding changes in a gyrencephalic brain exposed to a true open field blast are limited and thus forms the focus of this study. Anesthetized, male Yucatan swine were subjected to forward facing medium blast overpressure (peak side on overpressure 224–332 kPa; n = 7) or high blast overpressure (peak side on overpressure 350–403 kPa; n = 5) by detonating 3.6 kg of composition-4 charge. Sham animals (n = 5) were subjected to all the conditions without blast exposure. After a 3-day survival period, the brain was harvested and sections from the frontal lobes were processed for histological assessment of neuronal injury and glial reactivity changes. Significant neuronal injury in the form of beta amyloid precursor protein immunoreactive zones in the gray and white matter was observed in the frontal lobe sections from both the blast exposure groups. A significant increase in the number of astrocytes and microglia was also observed in the blast exposed sections compared to sham sections. We postulate that the observed acute injury changes may progress to chronic periods after blast and may contribute to short and long-term neuronal degeneration and glial mediated inflammation. Public Library of Science 2017-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5249202/ /pubmed/28107370 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169239 Text en © 2017 Kallakuri et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kallakuri, Srinivasu
Desai, Alok
Feng, Ke
Tummala, Sharvani
Saif, Tal
Chen, Chaoyang
Zhang, Liying
Cavanaugh, John M.
King, Albert I.
Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title_full Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title_fullStr Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title_full_unstemmed Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title_short Neuronal Injury and Glial Changes Are Hallmarks of Open Field Blast Exposure in Swine Frontal Lobe
title_sort neuronal injury and glial changes are hallmarks of open field blast exposure in swine frontal lobe
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5249202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28107370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169239
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