Journal of neurotrauma
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General categories of experimental brain injury models are reviewed regarding their clinical significance, and two new models are presented that use different methodology to produce injury. This report describes and characterizes the pathophysiologic changes produced by a novel fluid percussion (FP) method and a controlled cortical impact (CI) technique, both developed at the General Motors Research Laboratories (GMRL). The new models are compared to prior experimental brain injury techniques in relation to ongoing physical and analytical modeling used in automotive safety research by GMRL. ⋯ These controlled variables enable the amount of deformation and the change in deformation over time to be accurately determined. In addition, the CI model produces graded, reproducible cortical contusion, prolonged functional coma, and extensive axonal injury, unlike the FP technique. The quantifiable nature of the single mechanical input used to produce the injury allows correlations to be made between the amount of deformation and the resultant pathology and functional changes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1988
Modeling of therapeutic dialysis of cerebrospinal fluid by epidural cooling in spinal cord injuries.
Paraplegias of traumatic origin may be classified as primary or secondary. Secondary traumatic paraplegia (STP) is believed to result from an autodestructive process. Different authors have published results supporting or contradicting the therapeutic effects of durotomy alone or associated with exposed spinal cord and perfusion with a saline solution at normal or cold temperatures. ⋯ The size of these Bénard cells was estimated. The range of probe temperatures at which convective flow is generated was considered, as well as the relative benefits of hypothermia versus flow. Results of more rigorous analysis are discussed.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1988
Traumatic brain injury in the rat: effects on lipid metabolism, tissue magnesium, and water content.
Tissue levels of free fatty acids (FFA), total phospholipid, cholesterol, thromboxane B2, water, Na+, K+, and Mg2+ were measured in rat brain after lateral fluid-percussion brain injury of moderate severity (2.0-2.2 atm). Brains of injured animals and sham-operated controls were frozen in situ with liquid N2 at 10 min, 4 h, and 24 h postinjury and removed. The left parietal cortex, which has been shown previously histologically to be the site of maximal injury, was dissected for analysis. ⋯ Small decreases in tissue K+ occurred at 4 h; tissue Na+ levels were found to be slightly increased only at 24 h. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that changes in lipid metabolism and Mg2+ content of brain after injury may play a role in the pathophysiology of irreversible, posttraumatic tissue damage. In contrast, significant edema formation does not occur in this model and does not, therefore, appear to be a factor in the injury process.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1988
Spinal cord contusion in the rat: somatosensory evoked potentials as a function of graded injury.
A weight-drop technique was used to produce mild, moderate, or severe spinal cord contusive injury in rats. At 4 weeks after injury, somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were recorded with silver ball electrodes placed over the somatosensory cortex of anesthetized rats to measure the response to sciatic nerve stimulation. Both SEP area and amplitude were measured and were highly correlated with each other. ⋯ Measures of residual function consisted of a motor score, inclined plane test, and a combined behavioral score based on several neurologic functions. No correlation between latency of the SEP with degrees of contusive injury was observed. The data indicate that the SEP can be used as one criterion in the assessment of the severity of a lesion in a rat model of a graded spinal cord injury.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1988
Interaction of contact velocity and cord compression in determining the severity of spinal cord injury.
Rate, depth, and duration of compression are the principal determinants of experimental spinal cord injury (SCI) severity. Since existing models do not allow independent control of these variables, the interaction of these factors has not been fully elucidated. The purpose of this study was to define the interactive relation of velocity (V) and compression (C) in SCI using a constrained stroke pneumatic impactor that allowed independent control of these variables. ⋯ However, as velocity increases, SCI severity becomes a function of the viscous response (VC), demonstrating the rate sensitivity of spinal cord tissue. Tolerance to SC compression decreases as the rate of deformation increases. This helps to explain apparent discrepancies between compression and severity of experimental SCI.