Journal of neurotrauma
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Polyuria contributes to bladder overdistention, which confounds both lower and upper urinary tract management in individuals having a spinal cord injury (SCI). Bladder overdistention post-SCI is one of the most common triggers for autonomic dysreflexia, a potentially life-threatening condition. Post-SCI polyuria is thought to result from loss of vascular tone in the lower extremities, leading to edema and subsequent excess fluid, resulting in polyuria. ⋯ Step training (30 min/day, 6 days/week) did not alleviate polyuria in the moderate SCI contusion group. These results indicate that (1) mild injuries retaining weight-bearing locomotion that should have mild, if any, edema/loss of vascular tone still exhibit severe polyuria, and (2) step training was unable to reduce post-SCI polyuria. Taken together, these results indicate that the current mechanistic hypothesis of post-SCI polyuria may be incomplete.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2012
Acetylcholinesterase inhibition interacts with training to reverse spatial learning deficits after cortical impact injury.
Cholinergic mechanisms are known to play a key role in cognitive functions that are profoundly altered in traumatic brain injury (TBI). The present investigation was designed to test the ability of continuous administration, starting at the time of injury, of physostigmine (PHY), an acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitor that crosses the blood-brain barrier (BBB), to ameliorate the alterations of learning and memory induced by cerebral cortex impact injury in rats under isoflurane anesthesia. Learning and memory were assessed with the Morris water maze implemented during days 7-11 (WM1), and days 21-25 post-TBI (WM2), with four trials per day for 3 days, followed by target reversal and 2 additional days of training. ⋯ In WM2 tests, PHY improved within- and between-sessions performance at both dose levels. We found that continuous AChE inhibition interacted with repeated training on the water maze task to completely reverse the deficits seen in learning and memory induced by TBI. The PHY treatment also reduced the amount of brain tissue loss as measured using cresyl violet staining.
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In order to quantify degenerative and regenerative changes and analyze the contribution of multiple factors to the outcome after neurite transection, we cultured adult mouse dorsal root ganglion neurons, and with a precise laser beam, we transected the nerve fibers they extended. Cell preparations were continuously visualized for 24 h with time-lapse microscopy. More distal cuts caused a more elongated field of degeneration, while thicker neurites degenerated faster than thinner ones. ⋯ Branching slowed the regenerative process, while simultaneous degeneration of uncut neurites increased it. Proximal lesions, small neuronal size, and extensive and rapid neurite degeneration were predictive of death of an injured neuron, which typically displayed necrotic rather than apoptotic form. In conclusion, this in vitro model proved useful in unmasking many new aspects and correlates of mechanically-induced neurite injury.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Oct 2012
A discrimination task used as a novel method of testing decision-making behavior following traumatic brain injury.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) results in a multitude of deficits following injury. Some of the most pervasive in humans are the changes that affect frontally-mediated cognitive functioning, such as decision making. The assessment of decision-making behavior in rodents has been extensively tested in the field of the experimental analysis of behavior. ⋯ Upon reaching criterion, a reversal discrimination was evaluated in which the reinforcer was placed in unscented sand. Finally, a novel scent discrimination (basil versus coffee with basil reinforced), and a reversal (coffee) were evaluated. The results indicated that the Dig task is a simple experimental preparation that can be used to assess deficits in decision-making behavior following TBI.