Tsenter Jeanna, Beni-Adani Liana, Assaf Yaniv, Alexandrovich Alexander G, Trembovler Victoria, Shohami Esther
Department of Pharmacology, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
J Neurotrauma. 2008 Apr;25(4):324-33. doi: 10.1089/neu.2007.0452.
Memory and neurobehavioral dysfunctions are among the sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI). The Neurological Severity Score (NSS) includes 10 tasks and was previously designed to assess the functional status of mice after TBI. The object recognition task (ORT) measures specific episodic memory and is expressed by the percent time spent by an animal at a novel, unfamiliar object (Discrimination Index [DI]). It is an ideal tool for evaluating cognitive function after TBI. The present study sought to validate the use of the NSS and ORT in severe and mild focal TBI in mice, and to confirm that the spontaneous recovery and the radiological abnormalities, shown by T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), are dependent upon injury severity. Mice were subjected to severe and mild closed head injury (NSS at 1 h 7.52 +/- 0.34 and 4.62 +/- 0.14, respectively). NSS was evaluated for 25 days and showed a decrease by 3.86 +/- 0.26 and 2.54 +/- 0.35 units in the severely and mildly injured mice, respectively. ORT revealed DI in severely injured group of 51.7 +/- 6.15%, (vs approximately 75-80% in uninjured animal) on day 3 and 66.2 +/- 6.81% on day 21. In contrast, the mildly injured mice did not show cognitive impairment throughout the same period. The damage seen by MRI at 24 h after injury, strongly correlated with NSS(1h) (R = 0.87, p < 0.001). We conclude that NSS is a reliable tool for evaluation of neurological damage in head-injured mice, NSS(1h) predicts the motor dysfunction, cognitive damage, and brain-damage characteristics as depicted by T2-weighted MRI. The combined assessment of neurobehavioral and cognitive function along with MRI is most useful in evaluating recovery from injury, especially when testing effectiveness of novel treatments or genetic manipulations.
记忆和神经行为功能障碍是创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的后遗症之一。神经严重程度评分(NSS)包括10项任务,之前被设计用于评估TBI后小鼠的功能状态。物体识别任务(ORT)测量特定的情景记忆,并通过动物在新的、不熟悉物体上花费的时间百分比(辨别指数[DI])来表示。它是评估TBI后认知功能的理想工具。本研究旨在验证NSS和ORT在小鼠重度和轻度局灶性TBI中的应用,并确认T2加权磁共振成像(MRI)显示的自发恢复和放射学异常取决于损伤严重程度。小鼠遭受重度和轻度闭合性颅脑损伤(NSS在1小时时分别为7.52±0.34和4.62±0.14)。对NSS进行了25天的评估,结果显示重度和轻度受伤小鼠的NSS分别下降了3.86±0.26和2.54±0.35个单位。ORT显示重度损伤组在第3天的DI为51.7±6.15%(未受伤动物约为75 - 80%),在第21天为66.2±6.81%。相比之下,轻度受伤小鼠在同一时期未表现出认知障碍。损伤后24小时MRI所见损伤与NSS(1小时)密切相关(R = 0.87,p < 0.001)。我们得出结论,NSS是评估头部受伤小鼠神经损伤的可靠工具,NSS(1小时)可预测运动功能障碍、认知损伤以及T2加权MRI所显示的脑损伤特征。神经行为和认知功能与MRI的联合评估在评估损伤恢复方面最为有用,尤其是在测试新治疗方法或基因操作的有效性时。