Treatment of traumatic brain injury with 17α-ethinylestradiol-3-sulfate in a rat model

2017 ◽  
Vol 127 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harrison Kim ◽  
Tao Yu ◽  
Betul Cam-Etoz ◽  
Thomas van Groen ◽  
William J. Hubbard ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE17α-ethynylestradiol-3-sulfate (EE-3-SO4) is a highly water-soluble synthetic estrogen that has an extended half-life (∼ 10 hours) over that of naturally occurring estrogen (∼ 10 minutes). In this study, EE-3-SO4 was evaluated in a lateral fluid percussion–induced traumatic brain injury (TBI) model in rats.METHODSA total of 9 groups of Sprague-Dawley rats underwent craniectomy. Twenty-four hours later, lateral fluid percussion was applied to 6 groups of animals to induce TBI; the remaining 3 groups served as sham control groups. EE-3-SO4 (1 mg/kg body weight in 0.4 ml/kg body weight) or saline (vehicle control) was injected intravenously 1 hour after TBI; saline was injected in all sham animals. One day after EE-3-SO4/saline injection, intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), and partial brain oxygen pressure (PbtO2) were measured in Groups 1–3 (2 TBI groups and 1 sham group), and brain edema, diffusion axonal injury, and cerebral glycolysis were assessed in Groups 4–6 using MRI T2 mapping, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and FDG-PET imaging, respectively. Four days after dosing, the open-field anxiety of animals was assessed in Groups 7–9 by measuring the duration that each animal spent in the center area of an open chamber during 4 minutes of monitoring.RESULTSEE-3-SO4 significantly lowered ICP while raising CPP and PbtO2, compared with vehicle treatment in TBI-induced animals (p < 0.05). The mean size of cerebral edema of TBI animals treated with EE-3-SO4 was 25 ± 3 mm3 (mean ± SE), which was significantly smaller than that of vehicle-treated animals (67 ± 6 mm3, p < 0.001). Also, EE-3-SO4 treatment significantly increased the fractional anisotropy of the white matter in the ipsilateral side (p = 0.003) and cerebral glycolysis (p = 0.014). The mean duration that EE-3-SO4-treated animals spent in the center area was 12 ± 2 seconds, which was significantly longer than that of vehicle-treated animals (4 ± 1 seconds; p = 0.008) but not different from that of sham animals (11 ± 3 seconds; p > 0.05).CONCLUSIONSThese data support the clinical use of EE-3-SO4 for early TBI treatment.

1990 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 252-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald L. Hayes ◽  
Bruce G. Lyeth ◽  
Larry W. Jenkins ◽  
Richard Zimmerman ◽  
Tracy K. McIntosh ◽  
...  

✓ Naloxone (0.1, 1.0, or 20.0 mg/kg), morphine (1.0 or 10.0 mg/kg), or saline was administered systemically intraperitoneally to rats 15 minutes prior to moderate fluid-percussion brain injury. The effects of the drugs were measured on systemic physiological, neurological, and body-weight responses to injury. The animals were trained prior to injury and were assessed for 10 days after injury on body-weight responses and neurological endpoints. Low doses of naloxone (0.1 or 1.0 mg/kg) significantly exacerbated neurological deficits associated with injury. Morphine (10.0 mg/kg) significantly reduced neurological deficits associated with injury. The drugs had no effect on neurological measures or body weight in sham-injured animals. Drug treatments did not significantly alter systemic physiological responses to injury. Data from these experiments suggest the involvement of endogenous opioids in at least some components of neurological deficits following traumatic brain injury and suggest the possibility that at least some classes of endogenous opioids may protect against long-term neurological deficits produced by fluid-percussion injury to the rat.


Neuroreport ◽  
2014 ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustafa Q. Hameed ◽  
Grant S. Goodrich ◽  
Sameer C. Dhamne ◽  
Asa Amandusson ◽  
Tsung-Hsun Hsieh ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rinaldo Catta-Preta ◽  
Iva Zdillar ◽  
Bradley Jenner ◽  
Emily T. Doisy ◽  
Kayleen Tercovich ◽  
...  

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes acute and lasting impacts on the brain, driving pathology along anatomical, cellular, and behavioral dimensions. Rodent models offer the opportunity to study TBI in a controlled setting, and enable analysis of the temporal progression that occurs from injury to recovery. We applied transcriptomic and epigenomic analysis, characterize gene expression and in ipsilateral hippocampus at 1 and 14 days following moderate lateral fluid percussion (LFP) injury. This approach enabled us to identify differential gene expression (DEG) modules with distinct expression trajectories across the two time points. The major DEG modules represented genes that were up- or downregulated acutely, but largely recovered by 14 days. As expected, DEG modules with acute upregulation were associated with cell death and astrocytosis. Interestingly, acutely downregulated DEGs related to neurotransmission mostly recovered by two weeks. Upregulated DEG modules related to inflammation were not necessarily elevated acutely, but were strongly upregulated after two weeks. We identified a smaller DEG module with delayed upregulation at 14 days including genes related to cholesterol metabolism and amyloid beta clearance. Finally, differential expression was paralleled by changes in H3K4me3 at the promoters of differentially expressed genes at one day following TBI. Following TBI, changes in cell viability, function and ultimately behavior are dynamic processes. Our results show how transcriptomics in the preclinical setting has the potential to identify biomarkers for injury severity and/or recovery, to identify potential therapeutic targets, and, in the future, to evaluate efficacy of an intervention beyond measures of cell death or spatial learning.


Author(s):  
Janet Alder ◽  
Wendy Fujioka ◽  
Jonathan Lifshitz ◽  
David P. Crockett ◽  
Smita Thakker-Varia

Neuroscience ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 233-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.K. McIntosh ◽  
R. Vink ◽  
L. Noble ◽  
I. Yamakami ◽  
S. Fernyak ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 512-525
Author(s):  
Rinaldo Catta-Preta ◽  
Iva Zdilar ◽  
Bradley Jenner ◽  
Emily T. Doisy ◽  
Kayleen Tercovich ◽  
...  

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