Literature DB >> 29360998

Concussion, microvascular injury, and early tauopathy in young athletes after impact head injury and an impact concussion mouse model.

Chad A Tagge1,2, Andrew M Fisher1,2, Olga V Minaeva1,2,3, Amanda Gaudreau-Balderrama1,2, Juliet A Moncaster1,3,4, Xiao-Lei Zhang5, Mark W Wojnarowicz1,4, Noel Casey1,6, Haiyan Lu7, Olga N Kokiko-Cochran7, Sudad Saman8, Maria Ericsson9, Kristen D Onos10, Ronel Veksler11, Vladimir V Senatorov12, Asami Kondo13, Xiao Z Zhou13, Omid Miry5, Linnea R Vose5, Katisha R Gopaul5, Chirag Upreti5, Christopher J Nowinski4,14, Robert C Cantu4,14,15, Victor E Alvarez14,16, Audrey M Hildebrandt16, Erich S Franz1,2, Janusz Konrad2, James A Hamilton4, Ning Hua4, Yorghos Tripodis14,17, Andrew T Anderson18, Gareth R Howell10, Daniela Kaufer12,19, Garth F Hall8, Kun P Lu13, Richard M Ransohoff7, Robin O Cleveland20, Neil W Kowall4,14,16, Thor D Stein4,14,16, Bruce T Lamb7, Bertrand R Huber4,14,16,21, William C Moss18, Alon Friedman11,22, Patric K Stanton5, Ann C McKee4,14,16, Lee E Goldstein1,2,3,4,6,14.   

Abstract

The mechanisms underpinning concussion, traumatic brain injury, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and the relationships between these disorders, are poorly understood. We examined post-mortem brains from teenage athletes in the acute-subacute period after mild closed-head impact injury and found astrocytosis, myelinated axonopathy, microvascular injury, perivascular neuroinflammation, and phosphorylated tau protein pathology. To investigate causal mechanisms, we developed a mouse model of lateral closed-head impact injury that uses momentum transfer to induce traumatic head acceleration. Unanaesthetized mice subjected to unilateral impact exhibited abrupt onset, transient course, and rapid resolution of a concussion-like syndrome characterized by altered arousal, contralateral hemiparesis, truncal ataxia, locomotor and balance impairments, and neurobehavioural deficits. Experimental impact injury was associated with axonopathy, blood-brain barrier disruption, astrocytosis, microgliosis (with activation of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells, TREM2), monocyte infiltration, and phosphorylated tauopathy in cerebral cortex ipsilateral and subjacent to impact. Phosphorylated tauopathy was detected in ipsilateral axons by 24 h, bilateral axons and soma by 2 weeks, and distant cortex bilaterally at 5.5 months post-injury. Impact pathologies co-localized with serum albumin extravasation in the brain that was diagnostically detectable in living mice by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. These pathologies were also accompanied by early, persistent, and bilateral impairment in axonal conduction velocity in the hippocampus and defective long-term potentiation of synaptic neurotransmission in the medial prefrontal cortex, brain regions distant from acute brain injury. Surprisingly, acute neurobehavioural deficits at the time of injury did not correlate with blood-brain barrier disruption, microgliosis, neuroinflammation, phosphorylated tauopathy, or electrophysiological dysfunction. Furthermore, concussion-like deficits were observed after impact injury, but not after blast exposure under experimental conditions matched for head kinematics. Computational modelling showed that impact injury generated focal point loading on the head and seven-fold greater peak shear stress in the brain compared to blast exposure. Moreover, intracerebral shear stress peaked before onset of gross head motion. By comparison, blast induced distributed force loading on the head and diffuse, lower magnitude shear stress in the brain. We conclude that force loading mechanics at the time of injury shape acute neurobehavioural responses, structural brain damage, and neuropathological sequelae triggered by neurotrauma. These results indicate that closed-head impact injuries, independent of concussive signs, can induce traumatic brain injury as well as early pathologies and functional sequelae associated with chronic traumatic encephalopathy. These results also shed light on the origins of concussion and relationship to traumatic brain injury and its aftermath.awx350media15713427811001.
© The Author(s) (2018). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.

Entities:  

Keywords:  TREM2; chronic traumatic encephalopathy; concussion; tau protein; traumatic brain injury

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29360998      PMCID: PMC5837414          DOI: 10.1093/brain/awx350

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  175 in total

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3.  Chronic traumatic encephalopathy in blast-exposed military veterans and a blast neurotrauma mouse model.

Authors:  Lee E Goldstein; Andrew M Fisher; Chad A Tagge; Xiao-Lei Zhang; Libor Velisek; John A Sullivan; Chirag Upreti; Jonathan M Kracht; Maria Ericsson; Mark W Wojnarowicz; Cezar J Goletiani; Giorgi M Maglakelidze; Noel Casey; Juliet A Moncaster; Olga Minaeva; Robert D Moir; Christopher J Nowinski; Robert A Stern; Robert C Cantu; James Geiling; Jan K Blusztajn; Benjamin L Wolozin; Tsuneya Ikezu; Thor D Stein; Andrew E Budson; Neil W Kowall; David Chargin; Andre Sharon; Sudad Saman; Garth F Hall; William C Moss; Robin O Cleveland; Rudolph E Tanzi; Patric K Stanton; Ann C McKee
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5.  The epidemiology and impact of traumatic brain injury: a brief overview.

Authors:  Jean A Langlois; Wesley Rutland-Brown; Marlena M Wald
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8.  Alteration of default mode network in high school football athletes due to repetitive subconcussive mild traumatic brain injury: a resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

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Review 9.  Considerations for Experimental Animal Models of Concussion, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy-These Matters Matter.

Authors:  Mark W Wojnarowicz; Andrew M Fisher; Olga Minaeva; Lee E Goldstein
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2017-06-01       Impact factor: 4.003

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Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 6.556

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  109 in total

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2.  Systemic inflammation moderates the association of prior concussion with hippocampal volume and episodic memory in high school and collegiate athletes.

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3.  Evaluation of the specificity of the central diagnostic criterion for chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

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Journal:  Ir J Med Sci       Date:  2018-11-30       Impact factor: 1.568

4.  Changes in volumetric and metabolic parameters relate to differences in exposure to sub-concussive head impacts.

Authors:  Allen A Champagne; Nicole S Coverdale; Mike Germuska; Alex A Bhogal; Douglas J Cook
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 6.200

5.  Prevalence and Incidence of Microhemorrhages in Adolescent Football Players.

Authors:  B R Shah; J M Holcomb; E M Davenport; C M Lack; J M McDaniel; D M Imphean; Y Xi; D A Rosenbaum; J E Urban; B C Wagner; A K Powers; C T Whitlow; J D Stitzel; J A Maldjian
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Review 6.  Humble beginnings with big goals: Small molecule soluble epoxide hydrolase inhibitors for treating CNS disorders.

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7.  Repetitive Concussive and Subconcussive Injury in a Human Tau Mouse Model Results in Chronic Cognitive Dysfunction and Disruption of White Matter Tracts, But Not Tau Pathology.

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8.  Repetitive Head Impacts in Football Do Not Impair Dynamic Postural Control.

Authors:  Thomas A Buckley; Jessie R Oldham; Daniel J Watson; Nicholas G Murray; Barry A Munkasy; Kelsey M Evans
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9.  Contact sport participation and chronic traumatic encephalopathy are associated with altered severity and distribution of cerebral amyloid angiopathy.

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Review 10.  Breakdown of blood brain barrier as a mechanism of post-traumatic epilepsy.

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