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Biomarkers Track Damage after Graded Injury Severity in a Rat Model of Penetrating Brain Injury

Authors :
Boxuan Yang
Ronald L. Hayes
Xi-Chun May Lu
Jitendra R. Dave
Terri Cram
Kimberly J. Newsom
Jixiang Seaney
Kevin K.W. Wang
Firas Kobeissy
Virginia Rivera
Deborah A. Shear
Frank C. Tortella
Zhiqun Zhang
J. Susie Zoltewicz
Kara Schmid
Changping Yao
Stefania Mondello
Source :
Journal of Neurotrauma. 30:1161-1169
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2013.

Abstract

The goal of this project was to determine whether biochemical markers of brain damage can be used to diagnose and assess the severity of injury in a rat model of penetrating ballistic-like brain injury (PBBI). To determine the relationship between injury magnitude and biomarker levels, rats underwent three discrete PBBI severity levels defined by the magnitude of the ballistic component of the injury, calibrated to equal 5%, 10%, or 12.5% of total rat brain volume. Cortex, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and blood were collected at multiple time points. Levels of three biomarkers (αII-spectrin breakdown product [SBDP150], glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP], and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase-L1 [UCH-L1]), were measured using quantitative immunoblotting and/or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. In injured cortex, SBDP150 and GFAP levels were increased significantly over controls. Cortical SBDP150 was elevated at 1 day but not 7 days, and GFAP at 7 days but not 1 day. At their respective time points, mean levels of SBDP150 and GFAP biomarkers in the cortex rose stepwise as injury magnitude increased. In the CSF, increasing severity of PBBI was associated with increasing concentrations of both neuronal and glial biomarkers acutely at 1 day after injury, but no trends were observed at 7 days. In plasma, SBDP150 was elevated at 5 min after 10% PBBI and at 6 h after 12.5% PBBI. UCH-L1 levels in plasma were elevated acutely at 5 min post-injury reflecting injury severity and rapidly decreased within 2 h. Overall, our results support the conclusion that biomarkers are effective indicators of brain damage after PBBI and may also aid in the assessment of injury magnitude.

Details

ISSN :
15579042 and 08977151
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurotrauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f168b8a78326030b70e4b42a62984952
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2012.2762