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Journal Article

Citation

Ordek G, Asan AS, Cetinkaya E, Skotak M, Kakulavarapu VR, Chandra N, Sahin M. Sci. Rep. 2018; 8(1): e13633.

Affiliation

Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, 07102-1982, NJ, USA. sahin@njit.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/s41598-018-31728-4

PMID

30206255

Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms underlying traumatic neural injury and the sequelae of events in the acute phase is important for deciding on the best window of therapeutic intervention. We hypothesized that evoked potentials (EP) recorded from the cerebellar cortex can detect mild levels of neural trauma and provide a qualitative assessment tool for progression of cerebellar injury in time. The cerebellar local field potentials evoked by a mechanical tap on the hand and collected with chronically implanted micro-ECoG arrays on the rat cerebellar cortex demonstrated substantial changes both in amplitude and timing as a result of blast-wave induced injury. The results revealed that the largest EP changes occurred within the first day of injury, and partial recoveries were observed from day-1 to day-3, followed by a period of gradual improvements (day-7 to day-14). The mossy fiber (MF) and climbing fiber (CF) mediated components of the EPs were affected differentially. The behavioral tests (ladder rung walking) and immunohistological analysis (calbindin and caspase-3) did not reveal any detectable changes at these blast pressures that are typically considered as mild (100-130 kPa). The results demonstrate the sensitivity of the electrophysiological method and its use as a tool to monitor the progression of cerebellar injuries in longitudinal animal studies.


Language: en

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