Object With the recent increasing interest in outcomes after repetitive mild traumatic brain injury (rmTBI; e.g., sports concussions), several models of rmTBI have been established. Characterizing these models in terms of behavioral and histopathological outcomes is vital to assess their clinical translatability. The purpose of this study is to provide an in-depth behavioral and histopathological phenotype of a clinically relevant model of rmTBI. Methods We utilized a previously published weight drop model of rmTBI (7 injuries in 9 days) in 2–3 month old mice that produces cognitive deficits without persistent loss of consciousness, seizures, gross structural imaging or microscopic evidence of structural brain damage. Injured and sham injured (anesthesia only) mice were subjected to a battery of behavioral testing including tests of balance (rotorod), spatial memory (Morris water maze), anxiety (open field plus maze,), and exploratory behavior (holeboard). After behavioral testing, brains were assessed for histopathological outcomes including brain volume, microglial and astrocyte immunolabeling. Results Compared with sham mice, mice subjected to rmTBI showed increased exploratory behavior, had impaired balance, and worse spatial memory that persisted up to 3 months after injury. Long-term behavioral deficits were associated with chronic increased astrocytosis and microgliosis but no volume changes. Conclusions We demonstrate that our rmTBI model results in a characteristic behavioral phenotype that correlates with the clinical syndrome of concussion and repetitive concussion. This model offers a platform from which to study therapeutic interventions for rmTBI.
Acutely after concussion, single-task and dual-task stride-length alterations were present among youth athletes compared with a control group. Although single-task gait alterations were not detected after symptom resolution, dual-task gait differences persisted, suggesting that dual-task gait alterations may persist longer after concussion than single-task gait or objective quiet-stance alterations. Dual-task gait assessments may, therefore, be a useful component in monitoring concussion recovery after symptom resolution.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major public health issue, with recent increased awareness of the potential long-term sequelae of repetitive injury. While TBI is common, objective diagnostic tools with sound neurobiological predictors of outcome are lacking. Indeed, such tools could help identify those at risk for more severe outcomes after repetitive injury and improve understanding of biological underpinnings to provide important mechanistic insights. We tested the hypothesis that acute and subacute pathological injury, including the microgliosis that results from repeated, mild closed head injury, is reflected in susceptibility-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (SWI) and diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI) microstructural abnormalities. Using a combination of high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), stereology and qPCR, we studied the pathophysiology of male mice that sustained 7 consecutive mild traumatic brain injuries over 9 days in acute (24 hour) and subacute (1 week) time periods. Repetitive mild closed head injury induced focal cortical microhemorrhages and impaired axial diffusivity at one week post-injury. These microstructural abnormalities were associated with a significant increase in microglia. Notably, microgliosis was accompanied by a change in inflammatory microenvironment, defined by robust spatiotemporal alterations in tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) receptor mRNA. Together, these data contribute novel insight on the fundamental biological processes associated with repeated mild brain injury concomitant with subacute imaging abnormalities in a clinically relevant animal model of repeated mild TBI. These findings suggest new diagnostic techniques can be used as biomarkers to guide the use of future protective or reparative interventions.
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