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Journal Article

Citation

Lusardi TA, Lytle NK, Szybala C, Boison D. Exp. Neurol. 2011; 234(1): 161-168.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.expneurol.2011.12.026

PMID

22226594

PMCID

PMC3294054

Abstract

Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with a high incidence of acute mortality followed by chronic alteration of homeostatic network activity that includes the emergence of posttraumatic seizures. We hypothesized that acute and chronic outcome after severe TBI critically depends on disrupted bioenergetic network homeostasis, which is governed by the availability of the brain's endogenous neuroprotectant adenosine. We used a rat lateral fluid percussion injury (FPI) model of severe TBI with an acute mortality rate of 46.7%. A subset of rats was treated with 25mg/kg caffeine intraperitoneally within 1min of the injury. We assessed neuromotor function at 24h and 4weeks, and video-EEG activity and histology at 4weeks following injury. We first demonstrate that acute mortality is related to prolonged apnea and that a single acute injection of the adenosine receptor antagonist caffeine can completely prevent TBI-induced mortality when given immediately following the TBI. Second, we demonstrate that neuromotor function is not affected by caffeine treatment at either 24h or 4weeks following injury. Third, we demonstrate development of epileptiform EEG bursts as early as 4weeks post-injury that are significantly reduced in duration in the rats that received caffeine. Our data demonstrate that acute treatment with caffeine can prevent lethal apnea following fluid percussion injury, with no negative influence on motor function or histological outcome. Further, we show epileptiform bursting is reduced after caffeine treatment, suggesting a potential role in the modulation of epilepsy development after severe injury.


Language: en

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