PN disproportionately affects African Americans and is associated with several systemic conditions, including HIV, chronic kidney disease, and diabetes.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to increased anxiety and depression in as
many as 60% of patients. Yet, despite extensive clinical research
focused on understanding the variables influencing psychological well-being
following SCI, risk factors that decrease it remain unclear. We hypothesized
that excitation of the immune system, inherent to SCI, may contribute to the
decrease in psychological well-being. To test this hypothesis, we used a battery
of established behavioral tests to assess depression and anxiety in spinally
contused rats. The behavioral tests, and subsequent statistical analyses,
revealed three cohorts of subjects that displayed behavioral characteristics of
1) depression, 2) depression and anxiety, or 3) no signs of decreased
psychological well-being. Subsequent molecular analyses demonstrated that the
psychological cohorts differed not only in behavioral symptoms, but also in
peripheral (serum) and central (hippocampi and spinal cord) levels of
pro-inflammatory cytokines. Subjects exhibiting a purely depression-like profile
showed higher levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines peripherally, whereas
subjects exhibiting a depression- and anxiety-like profile showed higher levels
of pro-inflammatory cytokines centrally (hippocampi and spinal cord). These
changes in inflammation were not associated with injury severity; suggesting
that the association between inflammation and the expression of behaviors
characteristic of decreased psychological well-being was not confounded by
differential impairments in motor ability. These data support the hypothesis
that inflammatory changes are associated with decreased psychological well-being
following SCI.
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