blood brain barrier damage
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2022 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling-Zhuo Kong ◽  
Rui-Li Zhang ◽  
Shao-Hua Hu ◽  
Jian-Bo Lai

AbstractMilitary psychiatry, a new subcategory of psychiatry, has become an invaluable, intangible effect of the war. In this review, we begin by examining related military research, summarizing the related epidemiological data, neuropathology, and the research achievements of diagnosis and treatment technology, and discussing its comorbidity and sequelae. To date, advances in neuroimaging and molecular biology have greatly boosted the studies on military traumatic brain injury (TBI). In particular, in terms of pathophysiological mechanisms, several preclinical studies have identified abnormal protein accumulation, blood–brain barrier damage, and brain metabolism abnormalities involved in the development of TBI. As an important concept in the field of psychiatry, TBI is based on organic injury, which is largely different from many other mental disorders. Therefore, military TBI is both neuropathic and psychopathic, and is an emerging challenge at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. e202101164
Author(s):  
Sabine Borchard ◽  
Stefanie Raschke ◽  
Krzysztof M Zak ◽  
Carola Eberhagen ◽  
Claudia Einer ◽  
...  

In Wilson disease, excessive copper accumulates in patients’ livers and may, upon serum leakage, severely affect the brain according to current viewpoints. Present remedies aim at avoiding copper toxicity by chelation, for example, by D-penicillamine (DPA) or bis-choline tetrathiomolybdate (ALXN1840), the latter with a very high copper affinity. Hence, ALXN1840 may potentially avoid neurological deterioration that frequently occurs upon DPA treatment. As the etiology of such worsening is unclear, we reasoned that copper loosely bound to albumin, that is, mimicking a potential liver copper leakage into blood, may damage cells that constitute the blood-brain barrier, which was found to be the case in an in vitro model using primary porcine brain capillary endothelial cells. Such blood–brain barrier damage was avoided by ALXN1840, plausibly due to firm protein embedding of the chelator bound copper, but not by DPA. Mitochondrial protection was observed, a prerequisite for blood–brain barrier integrity. Thus, high-affinity copper chelators may minimize such deterioration in the treatment of neurologic Wilson disease.


2021 ◽  
Vol 429 ◽  
pp. 119406
Author(s):  
Lucrezia Becattini ◽  
Francesca Bianchi ◽  
Alessandra Govoni ◽  
Erika Schirinzi ◽  
Andrea Bacci ◽  
...  

Aging ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 21345-21363
Author(s):  
Li Cai ◽  
Beihai Ge ◽  
Shengbo Xu ◽  
Xiangwen Chen ◽  
Hong Yang

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