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Journal of neurotrauma · Feb 2020
Long-Term Effects of Blast Exposure: A Functional Study in Rats Using an Advanced Blast Simulator.
- Peethambaran Arun, Donna M Wilder, Ondine Eken, Rodrigo Urioste, Andrew Batuure, Sujith Sajja, Stephen Van Albert, Ying Wang, Irene D Gist, and Joseph B Long.
- Blast-Induced Neurotrauma Branch, Center for Military Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, Maryland.
- J. Neurotrauma. 2020 Feb 15; 37 (4): 647-655.
AbstractAnecdotal observations of blast victims indicate that significant neuropathological and neurobehavioral defects may develop at later stages of life. To pre-clinically model this phenomenon, we have examined neurobehavioral changes in rats up to 1 year after exposure to single and tightly coupled repeated blasts using an advanced blast simulator. Neurobehavioral changes were monitored at acute, sub-acute, and chronic time-points using Morris water maze test of spatial learning and memory, novel object recognition test of short-term memory, open field exploratory activity as a test of anxiety/depression, a rotating pole test for vestibulomotor function, and a rotarod balance test for motor coordination. Single and repeated blasts resulted in significant functional deficits at both acute and chronic time-points. In most functional tests, rats exposed to repeated blasts performed more poorly than rats exposed to single blast. Interestingly, several functional deficits post-blast were most pronounced at 6 months and beyond. Significant neuromotor impairments occurred at early stages after blast exposure and the severity increased with repeated exposures. The novel object recognition testing revealed short-term memory deficits at 6 and 12 months post-blast. The water maze test revealed impairments at acute and chronic stages after blast exposure. The most substantial changes in the blast-exposed rats were observed with the center time and margin time legacies in the open field exploration test at 6, 9, and 12 months post-blast. Notably, these two outcome measures were minimally altered acutely, recovered during sub-acute stages, and were markedly affected during the chronic stages after blast exposures and may implicate development of chronic anxiety and depressive-like behaviors.
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