학술논문

Blast-induced axonal degeneration in the rat cerebellum in the absence of head movement.
Document Type
article
Source
Scientific reports. 12(1)
Subject
Cerebellum
Visual Pathways
Axons
Optic Nerve
Animals
Rats
Long-Evans
Optic Nerve Injuries
Blast Injuries
Disease Models
Animal
Nerve Degeneration
Head Movements
Male
White Matter
Biomarkers
Brain Injuries
Traumatic
Neurosciences
Brain Disorders
Rare Diseases
Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects
Prevention
Injury - Traumatic brain injury
Injury - Trauma - (Head and Spine)
Neurological
Injuries and accidents
Language
Abstract
Blast exposure can injure brain by multiple mechanisms, and injury attributable to direct effects of the blast wave itself have been difficult to distinguish from that caused by rapid head displacement and other secondary processes. To resolve this issue, we used a rat model of blast exposure in which head movement was either strictly prevented or permitted in the lateral plane. Blast was found to produce axonal injury even with strict prevention of head movement. This axonal injury was restricted to the cerebellum, with the exception of injury in visual tracts secondary to ocular trauma. The cerebellar axonal injury was increased in rats in which blast-induced head movement was permitted, but the pattern of injury was unchanged. These findings support the contentions that blast per se, independent of head movement, is sufficient to induce axonal injury, and that axons in cerebellar white matter are particularly vulnerable to direct blast-induced injury.