| Literature DB >> 27117191 |
Stuart J McDonald1, Mujun Sun2, Denes V Agoston3, Sandy R Shultz4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traumatic injuries are physical insults to the body that are prevalent worldwide. Many individuals involved in accidents suffer injuries affecting a number of extremities and organs, otherwise known as multitrauma or polytrauma. Traumatic brain injury is one of the most serious forms of the trauma-induced injuries and is a leading cause of death and long-term disability. Despite over dozens of phase III clinical trials, there are currently no specific treatments known to improve traumatic brain injury outcomes. These failures are in part due to our still poor understanding of the heterogeneous and evolving pathophysiology of traumatic brain injury and how factors such as concomitant extracranial injuries can impact these processes. MAIN BODY: Here, we review the available clinical and pre-clinical studies that have investigated the possible impact of concomitant injuries on traumatic brain injury pathobiology and outcomes. We then list the pathophysiological processes that may interact and affect outcomes and discuss promising areas for future research. Taken together, many of the clinical multitrauma/polytrauma studies discussed in this review suggest that concomitant peripheral injuries may increase the risk of mortality and functional deficits following traumatic brain injury, particularly when severe extracranial injuries are combined with mild to moderate brain injury. In addition, recent animal studies have provided strong evidence that concomitant injuries may increase both peripheral and central inflammatory responses and that structural and functional deficits associated with traumatic brain injury may be exacerbated in multiply injured animals.Entities:
Keywords: Animal model; Bone fracture; Clinical; Concussion; Cytokines; Inflammation; Multitrauma; Polytrauma; Traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27117191 PMCID: PMC4847339 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-016-0555-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Clinical studies investigating the effect of extracranial injury (ECI) on traumatic brain injury (TBI)
| Studies reporting effects of ECI on TBI | |||
| Author | Subjects | Major Relevant Findings | Limitations |
| Kumar et al., 2015 | 114 TBI patients | - Weekly average patient serum IL-6 and IL-10 higher in PT compared to isolated TBI group | –TBI group older than PT (Mean age 39 v 30) |
| Leitgeb et al., 2013 | 767 TBI patients | –Mortality higher in mild TBI (AIS = 2) patients with ECI, however overall mortality comparable between groups | –TBI group older than MT (Mean age 61 v 46) |
| Lingsma et al., 2013 | 508 TBI patients | –Unfavourable outcome (GOS = 2/3) and mortality higher for patients with moderate TBI and ECI than for isolated moderate TBI | –Missing patients in follow up |
| Leong et al., 2013 | 100 TBI patients | –Fewer mild TBI patients with ECI made ‘good recovery’ (GOS = 5) compared with those with isolated mTBI | –Low numbers |
| Van Leeuwen et al., 2012 | 39,274 TBI patients (IMPACT, CRASH, TARN databases) | –IMPACT/CRASH pooled adjusted OR: Effect of ECI on mortality = 2.14 in mild-, 1.46 moderate-, 1.18 severe-TBI. | –Missing values in databases |
| Lefering et al., 2008 | 21,356 trauma patients | –Non-significant increase in mortality in MT versus TBI only overall, but significant difference at all TBI severities when ECI AIS ≥ 4 | –No GCS used |
| Hensler et al., 2002 | 125 trauma patients | –Serum levels of IL-6, IL-10, 55- and 75-kDa soluble tumor necrosis factor receptors, polymorphonuclear neutrophil elastase all lower in patients with TBI only compared with PT (with and without TBI) | –Low numbers |
| Siegel et al., 1991 | 1709 TBI patients | –Overall mortality rate (all GCS) almost tripled in blunt TBI patients with pelvis or femur fracture (similar results for lung-, liver-, bowel-, major vessel- injury). | –Variability in ECI severity |
| Gennarelli et al., 1989 | 16,524 TBI patients | –Synergistic effect on mortality when moderate head injuries (AIS 3–4) combined with severe ECI (AIS 4–6). | –No GCS used |
| Studies reporting no/inconclusive effects of ECI on TBI | |||
| Author | Subjects | Major Relevant Findings | Limitations |
| Stulemeijer et al., 2006 | 299 TBI patients | –Mild TBI patients with ECI had worsened GOS-E scores, however no differences in post-concussion symptoms at 6 months | –TBI slightly more severe in MT patients |
| Sarrafzadech et al., 2001 | 119 trauma patients | –No difference in physiological variables between patients with isolated TBI or MT with TBI between days 1–12 post-injury | –TBI group older than MT (Mean age 36 v 28) |
| Baltas et al., 1998 | 386 TBI patients | –No difference in mortality in MT versus TBI only groups. | –No defined AIS for extracranial injury |
ECI extracranial injury, MT multitrauma, PT polytrauma
Animal studies on the effects of extracranial injury on TBI
| Author | Subjects | Major Relevant Findings | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yang et al., 2016 | Male C57BL/6 mice. 12–14 weeks old | –Elevated brain levels of IL-6 at 2- and 4-days in MT mice compared to TBI mice, higher levels of TNF-α and IL-1β levels at 4 days. | –No FX only group: FX affect neurological scores? |
| Shultz et al., 2015 | 124 male C57BL/6 mice. 12 weeks old | –Brain IL-1β levels higher in MT group compared to all groups at 24 h and 35 days, GFAP elevated in MT mice at 24 h and 35 days, neutrophil highest in MT mice at 24 h | - Variability in serum cytokine levels |
| Weckbach et al., 2013 | Male C57BL/6 mice. 8–9 weeks old. | –Serum IL-6 higher in PT mice compared to all other groups at 2 h, only elevated in PT and MT mice involving TBI at 6 h | –Only acute time-point analysis |
| Probst et al., 2012 | 45 male C57BL/6 mice. 8–10 weeks old. | –Mortality rates higher in PT compared to FX/Shock and TBI only | –No sham/control animals |
| Weckbach et al., 2012 | 352 male Wistar rats, 10–12 weeks old | –Serum IL-6 singificantly increased in PT animals only | –Only acute time-point analysis |
| Mirzayan et al., 2012 | 60 male C57BL/6 mice. 8–10 weeks old. | –Trend ( | –No sham animals (only controls)- |
| Maegele et al., 2007 | 100 male Sprague–Dawley rats, 300–250g | –Serum IL-6 and IL-10 levels higher in MT rats compared TBI only and FX only rats during first week post-injury | –Small numbers per group for plasma analysis (3–5) |
MT multitrauma, PT polytrauma, FX fracture
Fig. 1Possible pathways through which extracranial injury may alter TBI pathobiology. Secondary injury processes of TBI include neuroinflammation, excitotoxicity, metabolic disturbances, apoptosis, ischemia, oxidative stress, and BBB disruption. The neuroinflammatory response of TBI is characterized by microglial and astrocyte activation, leukocyte infiltration and elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. For multitrauma/polytrauma patients, there is potential for the systemic effects of significant extracranial injuries to impact upon secondary injury pathways of TBI, and in particular the neuroinflammatory response. Possible extracranial trauma-induced influences on TBI include elevated circulating inflammatory cytokines, growth factors, reactive oxygen species, and for the patient with bone fracture, potential influence of fat emboli and mobilized mesenchymal stem cells. Polytrauma may produce the added risk of central influences of sepsis, SIRS and hemorrhagic shock