Alder Janet, Fujioka Wendy, Lifshitz Jonathan, Crockett David P, Thakker-Varia Smita
Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, NJ, USA.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Aug 22(54):3063. doi: 10.3791/3063.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) research has attained renewed momentum due to the increasing awareness of head injuries, which result in morbidity and mortality. Based on the nature of primary injury following TBI, complex and heterogeneous secondary consequences result, which are followed by regenerative processes (1,2). Primary injury can be induced by a direct contusion to the brain from skull fracture or from shearing and stretching of tissue causing displacement of brain due to movement (3,4). The resulting hematomas and lacerations cause a vascular response (3,5), and the morphological and functional damage of the white matter leads to diffuse axonal injury (6-8). Additional secondary changes commonly seen in the brain are edema and increased intracranial pressure (9). Following TBI there are microscopic alterations in biochemical and physiological pathways involving the release of excitotoxic neurotransmitters, immune mediators and oxygen radicals (10-12), which ultimately result in long-term neurological disabilities (13,14). Thus choosing appropriate animal models of TBI that present similar cellular and molecular events in human and rodent TBI is critical for studying the mechanisms underlying injury and repair. Various experimental models of TBI have been developed to reproduce aspects of TBI observed in humans, among them three specific models are widely adapted for rodents: fluid percussion, cortical impact and weight drop/impact acceleration (1). The fluid percussion device produces an injury through a craniectomy by applying a brief fluid pressure pulse on to the intact dura. The pulse is created by a pendulum striking the piston of a reservoir of fluid. The percussion produces brief displacement and deformation of neural tissue (1,15). Conversely, cortical impact injury delivers mechanical energy to the intact dura via a rigid impactor under pneumatic pressure (16,17). The weight drop/impact model is characterized by the fall of a rod with a specific mass on the closed skull (18). Among the TBI models, LFP is the most established and commonly used model to evaluate mixed focal and diffuse brain injury (19). It is reproducible and is standardized to allow for the manipulation of injury parameters. LFP recapitulates injuries observed in humans, thus rendering it clinically relevant, and allows for exploration of novel therapeutics for clinical translation (20). We describe the detailed protocol to perform LFP procedure in mice. The injury inflicted is mild to moderate, with brain regions such as cortex, hippocampus and corpus callosum being most vulnerable. Hippocampal and motor learning tasks are explored following LFP.
由于人们对头部损伤导致的发病率和死亡率的认识不断提高,创伤性脑损伤(TBI)研究获得了新的动力。根据TBI后原发性损伤的性质,会产生复杂且异质性的继发性后果,随后是再生过程(1,2)。原发性损伤可由颅骨骨折对大脑的直接挫伤引起,也可由组织的剪切和拉伸导致大脑因运动而移位引起(3,4)。由此产生的血肿和撕裂会引发血管反应(3,5),白质的形态和功能损伤会导致弥漫性轴索损伤(6 - 8)。大脑中常见的其他继发性变化是水肿和颅内压升高(9)。TBI后,涉及兴奋性毒性神经递质、免疫介质和氧自由基释放的生化和生理途径会发生微观改变(10 - 12),最终导致长期神经功能障碍(13,14)。因此,选择合适的TBI动物模型,使其在人类和啮齿动物TBI中呈现相似的细胞和分子事件,对于研究损伤和修复的潜在机制至关重要。已经开发了各种TBI实验模型来重现人类中观察到的TBI的各个方面,其中三种特定模型被广泛应用于啮齿动物:液压冲击、皮质撞击和重物下落/撞击加速(1)。液压冲击装置通过在完整的硬脑膜上施加短暂的液压脉冲,通过颅骨切除术造成损伤。该脉冲由摆锤撞击液体储存器的活塞产生。冲击会使神经组织产生短暂的位移和变形(1,15)。相反,皮质撞击损伤通过气动压力下的刚性冲击器将机械能传递到完整的硬脑膜上(16,17)。重物下落/撞击模型的特点是具有特定质量的杆落在闭合的颅骨上(18)。在TBI模型中,液压冲击是评估混合性局灶性和弥漫性脑损伤最成熟且最常用的模型(19)。它具有可重复性且已标准化,以允许对损伤参数进行操作。液压冲击重现了在人类中观察到的损伤,因此使其具有临床相关性,并允许探索用于临床转化的新型疗法(20)。我们描述了在小鼠中进行液压冲击程序的详细方案。造成的损伤为轻度至中度,大脑区域如皮质、海马体和胼胝体最易受损。在液压冲击后探索海马体和运动学习任务。