TY - JOUR PY - 2019// TI - A mouse model of repetitive blast traumatic brain injury reveals post-trauma seizures and increased neuronal excitability JO - Journal of neurotrauma A1 - Bugay, Vladislav A1 - Bozdemir, Eda A1 - Vigil, Fabio Antonio A1 - Holstein, Deborah M. A1 - Chun, Sang H. A1 - Elliot, William A1 - Sprague, Cassie A1 - Cavazos, Jose E. A1 - Zamora, David O. A1 - Rule, Greg A1 - Shapiro, Mark S. A1 - Lechleiter, James Donald A1 - Brenner, Robert SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - Repetitive blast traumatic brain injury affects numerous soldiers on the battlefield. Mild traumatic brain injury has been shown to have long-lasting effects with repeated injury. Here we have investigated effects on neuronal excitability following repetitive, mild traumatic brain injury in a mouse model of blast-induced brain injury. We exposed mice to mild blast trauma of an average peak overpressure of 14.6 psi, repeated across 3 consecutive days. While a single exposure did not reveal trauma as indicated by the GFAP indicator, 3 repetitive blasts did show significant increases. As well, mice had increased indicator of inflammation (Iba-1), and increased tau, tau phosphorylation, and altered cytokine levels in spleen. Video-EEG monitoring 48 hours after the final blast exposure demonstrated seizures in 50% (12/24) of the mice, most of which were non-convulsive seizures. Long-term monitoring revealed at least 46% (6/13) of the mice developed spontaneous seizures. Patch clamp recording of dentate gyrus hippocampus neurons 48 hours post-blast TBI demonstrated a shortened latency to the first spike, and hyperpolarization of action potential threshold. We also found that EPSC amplitudes were significantly increased. These findings indicate that mild, repetitive blast exposures cause increases in neuronal excitability and seizures, and eventual epilepsy development in some animals. The non-convulsive nature of the seizures suggests that subclinical seizures may occur in individuals experiencing even mild blast events, if repeated.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0897-7151 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2018.6333 ID - ref1 ER -