Cargando…

Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players

Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury in American football players has garnered increasing public attention following reports of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a progressive tauopathy. While the mechanisms underlying repetitive mild traumatic brain injury-induced neurodegeneration are unknown an...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Veksler, Ronel, Vazana, Udi, Serlin, Yonatan, Prager, Ofer, Ofer, Jonathan, Shemen, Nofar, Fisher, Andrew M, Minaeva, Olga, Hua, Ning, Saar-Ashkenazy, Rotem, Benou, Itay, Riklin-Raviv, Tammy, Parker, Ellen, Mumby, Griffin, Kamintsky, Lyna, Beyea, Steven, Bowen, Chris V, Shelef, Ilan, O’Keeffe, Eoin, Campbell, Matthew, Kaufer, Daniela, Goldstein, Lee E, Friedman, Alon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7297017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32464655
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa140
_version_ 1783546937228656640
author Veksler, Ronel
Vazana, Udi
Serlin, Yonatan
Prager, Ofer
Ofer, Jonathan
Shemen, Nofar
Fisher, Andrew M
Minaeva, Olga
Hua, Ning
Saar-Ashkenazy, Rotem
Benou, Itay
Riklin-Raviv, Tammy
Parker, Ellen
Mumby, Griffin
Kamintsky, Lyna
Beyea, Steven
Bowen, Chris V
Shelef, Ilan
O’Keeffe, Eoin
Campbell, Matthew
Kaufer, Daniela
Goldstein, Lee E
Friedman, Alon
author_facet Veksler, Ronel
Vazana, Udi
Serlin, Yonatan
Prager, Ofer
Ofer, Jonathan
Shemen, Nofar
Fisher, Andrew M
Minaeva, Olga
Hua, Ning
Saar-Ashkenazy, Rotem
Benou, Itay
Riklin-Raviv, Tammy
Parker, Ellen
Mumby, Griffin
Kamintsky, Lyna
Beyea, Steven
Bowen, Chris V
Shelef, Ilan
O’Keeffe, Eoin
Campbell, Matthew
Kaufer, Daniela
Goldstein, Lee E
Friedman, Alon
author_sort Veksler, Ronel
collection PubMed
description Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury in American football players has garnered increasing public attention following reports of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a progressive tauopathy. While the mechanisms underlying repetitive mild traumatic brain injury-induced neurodegeneration are unknown and antemortem diagnostic tests are not available, neuropathology studies suggest a pathogenic role for microvascular injury, specifically blood–brain barrier dysfunction. Thus, our main objective was to demonstrate the effectiveness of a modified dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI approach we have developed to detect impairments in brain microvascular function. To this end, we scanned 42 adult male amateur American football players and a control group comprising 27 athletes practicing a non-contact sport and 26 non-athletes. MRI scans were also performed in 51 patients with brain pathologies involving the blood–brain barrier, namely malignant brain tumours, ischaemic stroke and haemorrhagic traumatic contusion. Based on data from prolonged scans, we generated maps that visualized the permeability value for each brain voxel. Our permeability maps revealed an increase in slow blood-to-brain transport in a subset of amateur American football players, but not in sex- and age-matched controls. The increase in permeability was region specific (white matter, midbrain peduncles, red nucleus, temporal cortex) and correlated with changes in white matter, which were confirmed by diffusion tensor imaging. Additionally, increased permeability persisted for months, as seen in players who were scanned both on- and off-season. Examination of patients with brain pathologies revealed that slow tracer accumulation characterizes areas surrounding the core of injury, which frequently shows fast blood-to-brain transport. Next, we verified our method in two rodent models: rats and mice subjected to repeated mild closed-head impact injury, and rats with vascular injury inflicted by photothrombosis. In both models, slow blood-to-brain transport was observed, which correlated with neuropathological changes. Lastly, computational simulations and direct imaging of the transport of Evans blue-albumin complex in brains of rats subjected to recurrent seizures or focal cerebrovascular injury suggest that increased cellular transport underlies the observed slow blood-to-brain transport. Taken together, our findings suggest dynamic contrast-enhanced-MRI can be used to diagnose specific microvascular pathology after traumatic brain injury and other brain pathologies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7297017
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-72970172020-06-22 Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players Veksler, Ronel Vazana, Udi Serlin, Yonatan Prager, Ofer Ofer, Jonathan Shemen, Nofar Fisher, Andrew M Minaeva, Olga Hua, Ning Saar-Ashkenazy, Rotem Benou, Itay Riklin-Raviv, Tammy Parker, Ellen Mumby, Griffin Kamintsky, Lyna Beyea, Steven Bowen, Chris V Shelef, Ilan O’Keeffe, Eoin Campbell, Matthew Kaufer, Daniela Goldstein, Lee E Friedman, Alon Brain Original Articles Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury in American football players has garnered increasing public attention following reports of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a progressive tauopathy. While the mechanisms underlying repetitive mild traumatic brain injury-induced neurodegeneration are unknown and antemortem diagnostic tests are not available, neuropathology studies suggest a pathogenic role for microvascular injury, specifically blood–brain barrier dysfunction. Thus, our main objective was to demonstrate the effectiveness of a modified dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI approach we have developed to detect impairments in brain microvascular function. To this end, we scanned 42 adult male amateur American football players and a control group comprising 27 athletes practicing a non-contact sport and 26 non-athletes. MRI scans were also performed in 51 patients with brain pathologies involving the blood–brain barrier, namely malignant brain tumours, ischaemic stroke and haemorrhagic traumatic contusion. Based on data from prolonged scans, we generated maps that visualized the permeability value for each brain voxel. Our permeability maps revealed an increase in slow blood-to-brain transport in a subset of amateur American football players, but not in sex- and age-matched controls. The increase in permeability was region specific (white matter, midbrain peduncles, red nucleus, temporal cortex) and correlated with changes in white matter, which were confirmed by diffusion tensor imaging. Additionally, increased permeability persisted for months, as seen in players who were scanned both on- and off-season. Examination of patients with brain pathologies revealed that slow tracer accumulation characterizes areas surrounding the core of injury, which frequently shows fast blood-to-brain transport. Next, we verified our method in two rodent models: rats and mice subjected to repeated mild closed-head impact injury, and rats with vascular injury inflicted by photothrombosis. In both models, slow blood-to-brain transport was observed, which correlated with neuropathological changes. Lastly, computational simulations and direct imaging of the transport of Evans blue-albumin complex in brains of rats subjected to recurrent seizures or focal cerebrovascular injury suggest that increased cellular transport underlies the observed slow blood-to-brain transport. Taken together, our findings suggest dynamic contrast-enhanced-MRI can be used to diagnose specific microvascular pathology after traumatic brain injury and other brain pathologies. Oxford University Press 2020-06 2020-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7297017/ /pubmed/32464655 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa140 Text en © The Author(s) (2020). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Articles
Veksler, Ronel
Vazana, Udi
Serlin, Yonatan
Prager, Ofer
Ofer, Jonathan
Shemen, Nofar
Fisher, Andrew M
Minaeva, Olga
Hua, Ning
Saar-Ashkenazy, Rotem
Benou, Itay
Riklin-Raviv, Tammy
Parker, Ellen
Mumby, Griffin
Kamintsky, Lyna
Beyea, Steven
Bowen, Chris V
Shelef, Ilan
O’Keeffe, Eoin
Campbell, Matthew
Kaufer, Daniela
Goldstein, Lee E
Friedman, Alon
Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title_full Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title_fullStr Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title_full_unstemmed Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title_short Slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in American football players
title_sort slow blood-to-brain transport underlies enduring barrier dysfunction in american football players
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7297017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32464655
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa140
work_keys_str_mv AT vekslerronel slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT vazanaudi slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT serlinyonatan slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT pragerofer slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT oferjonathan slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT shemennofar slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT fisherandrewm slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT minaevaolga slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT huaning slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT saarashkenazyrotem slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT benouitay slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT riklinravivtammy slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT parkerellen slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT mumbygriffin slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT kamintskylyna slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT beyeasteven slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT bowenchrisv slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT shelefilan slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT okeeffeeoin slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT campbellmatthew slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT kauferdaniela slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT goldsteinleee slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers
AT friedmanalon slowbloodtobraintransportunderliesenduringbarrierdysfunctioninamericanfootballplayers