학술논문

Neurovascular hypoxia after mild traumatic brain injury in juvenile mice correlates with heart–brain dysfunctions in adulthood.
Document Type
Article
Source
Acta Physiologica. Jun2023, Vol. 238 Issue 2, p1-17. 17p. 1 Diagram, 6 Graphs.
Subject
*BRAIN injuries
*BEHAVIOR modification
*ACOUSTIC imaging
*HEART function tests
*SOMATOSENSORY cortex
Language
ISSN
1748-1708
Abstract
Aim: Retrospective studies suggest that mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in pediatric patients may lead to an increased risk of cardiac events. However, the exact functional and temporal dynamics and the associations between heart and brain pathophysiological trajectories are not understood. Methods: A single impact to the left somatosensory cortical area of the intact skull was performed on juvenile mice (17 days postnatal). Cerebral 3D photoacoustic imaging was used to measure the oxygen saturation (sO2) in the impacted area 4 h after mTBI followed by 2D and 4D echocardiography at days 7, 30, 90, and 190 post‐impact. At 8 months, we performed a dobutamine stress test to evaluate cardiac function. Lastly, behavioral analyses were conducted 1 year after initial injury. Results: We report a rapid and transient decrease in cerebrovascular sO2 and increased hemoglobin in the impacted left brain cortex. Cardiac analyses showed long‐term diastolic dysfunction and a diminished systolic strain response under stress in the mTBI group. At the molecular level, cardiac T‐p38MAPK and troponin I expression was pathologic modified post‐mTBI. We found linear correlations between brain sO2 measured immediately post‐mTBI and long‐term cardiac strain after 8 months. We report that initial cerebrovascular hypoxia and chronic cardiac dysfunction correlated with long‐term behavioral changes hinting at anxiety‐like and memory maladaptation. Conclusion: Experimental juvenile mTBI induces time‐dependent cardiac dysfunction that corresponds to the initial neurovascular sO2 dip and is associated with long‐term behavioral modifications. These imaging biomarkers of the heart–brain axis could be applied to improve clinical pediatric mTBI management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]