Machado Christopher J, Snyder Abraham Z, Cherry Simon R, Lavenex Pierre, Amaral David G
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, the California National Primate Research Center, 2825 50th Street, UC Davis, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA.
Neuroimage. 2008 Jan 15;39(2):832-46. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.09.029. Epub 2007 Sep 26.
Longitudinal analysis of animals with neonatal brain lesions enables the evaluation of behavioral changes during multiple stages of development. Interpretation of such changes, however, carries the caveat that permanent neural injury also yields morphological and neurochemical reorganization elsewhere in the brain that may lead either to functional compensation or to exacerbation of behavioral alterations. We have measured the long-term effects of selective neonatal brain damage on resting cerebral glucose metabolism in nonhuman primates. Sixteen rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) received neurotoxic lesions of either the amygdala (n=8) or hippocampus (n=8) when they were two weeks old. Four years later, these animals, along with age- and experience-matched sham-operated control animals (n=8), were studied with high-resolution positron emission tomography (microPET) and 2-deoxy-2[(18)F]fluoro-d-glucose ([(18)F]FDG) to detect areas of altered metabolism. The groups were compared using an anatomically-based region of interest analysis. Relative to controls, amygdala-lesioned animals displayed hypometabolism in three frontal lobe regions, as well as in the neostriatum and hippocampus. Hypermetabolism was also evident in the cerebellum of amygdala-lesioned animals. Hippocampal-lesioned animals only showed hypometabolism in the retrosplenial cortex. These results indicate that neonatal amygdala and hippocampus lesions induce very different patterns of long-lasting metabolic changes in distant brain regions. These observations raise the possibility that behavioral alterations in animals with neonatal lesions may be due to the intended damage, to consequent brain reorganization or to a combination of both factors.
对患有新生儿脑损伤的动物进行纵向分析,有助于评估其在多个发育阶段的行为变化。然而,对这些变化的解读需要注意的是,永久性神经损伤也会导致大脑其他部位的形态和神经化学重组,这可能会导致功能补偿或行为改变的加剧。我们测量了选择性新生儿脑损伤对非人类灵长类动物静息脑葡萄糖代谢的长期影响。16只恒河猴(猕猴)在两周大时接受了杏仁核(n = 8)或海马体(n = 8)的神经毒性损伤。四年后,这些动物与年龄和经验匹配的假手术对照动物(n = 8)一起,接受了高分辨率正电子发射断层扫描(microPET)和2-脱氧-2-[(18)F]氟-D-葡萄糖([(18)F]FDG)检查,以检测代谢改变的区域。使用基于解剖学的感兴趣区域分析对各组进行比较。与对照组相比,杏仁核损伤的动物在三个额叶区域以及新纹状体和海马体中表现出代谢减低。杏仁核损伤的动物小脑也出现了代谢增高。海马体损伤的动物仅在脾后皮质表现出代谢减低。这些结果表明,新生儿杏仁核和海马体损伤会在远处脑区诱导出非常不同的长期代谢变化模式。这些观察结果增加了这样一种可能性,即患有新生儿损伤的动物的行为改变可能是由于预期的损伤、随之而来的大脑重组或这两种因素的综合作用。