| Literature DB >> 27283975 |
Thiago Beltram Marcelino1, Patricia Idalina de Lemos Rodrigues2, Caroline Peres Klein1, Bernardo Gindri Dos Santos1, Patrícia Maidana Miguel3, Carlos Alexandre Netto4, Lenir Orlandi Pereira Silva3, Cristiane Matté5.
Abstract
Hypoxia-ischemia (HI) represents one of the most common causes of neonatal encephalopathy. The central nervous system injury comprises several mechanisms, including inflammatory, excitotoxicity, and redox homeostasis unbalance leading to cell death and cognitive impairment. Exercise during pregnancy is a potential therapeutic tool due to benefits offered to mother and fetus. Swimming during pregnancy elicits a strong metabolic programming in the offspring's brain, evidenced by increased antioxidant enzymes, mitochondrial biogenesis, and neurogenesis. This article aims to evaluate whether the benefits of maternal exercise are able to prevent behavioral brain injury caused by neonatal HI. Female adult Wistar rats swam before and during pregnancy (30min/day, 5 days/week, 4 weeks). At 7(th) day after birth, the offspring was submitted to HI protocol and, in adulthood (60(th) day), it performed the behavioral tests. It was observed an increase in motor activity in the open field test in HI-rats, which was not prevented by maternal exercise. The rats subjected to maternal swimming presented an improved long-term memory in the object recognition task, which was totally reversed by neonatal HI encephalopathy. BDNF brain levels were not altered; suggesting that HI or maternal exercise effects were BDNF-independent. In summary, our data suggest a beneficial long-term effect of maternal swimming, despite not being robust enough to protect from HI injury.Entities:
Keywords: BDNF; Maternal swimming exercise; Neonatal hypoxia-ischemia; Object recognition test; Open field test
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27283975 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2016.06.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332