Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jul 2024
Behavioral interventions can improve brain injury-induced deficits in behavioral flexibility and impulsivity linked to impaired reward-feedback beta oscillations.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects a large population, resulting in severe cognitive impairments. Although cognitive rehabilitation is an accepted treatment for some deficits, studies in patients are limited in ability to probe physiological and behavioral mechanisms. Therefore, animal models are needed to optimize strategies. ⋯ The behavioral intervention improved flexibility and increased OFC activity. Intervention also reduced impulsivity, even after cues were decoupled, which was partially mediated by improvements in timing behavior. The current study established a platform to begin investigating cognitive rehabilitation in rats and identified a strong role for dysfunctional OFC signaling in probabilistic learning after frontal TBI.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jul 2024
ReviewEffectiveness of non-pharmacological therapy on physical symptoms in patients with persistent concussion symptoms: A Systematic Review.
This systematic review provides a comprehensive overview on the effectiveness of rehabilitation on physical symptoms in patients of all ages with persistent concussion symptoms. PubMed, MEDLINE®, Cochrane library, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Embase were searched from January 1, 2012 to September 1, 2023 using terms related to physical post-concussion symptoms. Eligible articles were critically appraised using the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) and the Quality Assessment Tool. ⋯ Finally, in a pediatric population, the use of melatonin did not produce any changes in physical persistent concussion symptoms as compared with placebo. Preliminary evidence suggests that various forms of rehabilitative therapies can improve persistent physical concussive symptoms. However, given the methodological limitations in the majority of trials, the results need to be interpreted with caution.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jul 2024
Widespread white matter abnormalities in concussed athletes detected by 7T diffusion MRI.
Sports-related concussions may cause white matter injuries and persistent post-concussive symptoms (PPCS). We hypothesized that athletes with PPCS would have neurocognitive impairments and white matter abnormalities that could be revealed by advanced neuroimaging using ultra-high field strength diffusion tensor (DTI) and diffusion kurtosis (DKI) imaging metrics and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers. A cohort of athletes with PPCS severity limiting the ability to work/study and participate in sport school and/or social activities for ≥6 months completed 7T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (morphological T1-weighed volumetry, DTI and DKI), extensive neuropsychological testing, symptom rating, and CSF biomarker sampling. ⋯ In this first 7T DTI and DKI study investigating PPCS, widespread microstructural alterations were observed in the white matter, correlating with CSF markers of axonal injury. More white matter changes were observed using DKI than using DTI. These white matter alterations may indicate persistent pathophysiological processes following concussion in sport.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jul 2024
A Four Country Study of Strangulation-related Alterations in Consciousness in Women who have Experienced Intimate Partner Violence: Co-occurrence with Traumatic Brain Injuries and Measures of Psychological Distress.
At least one in three women experience intimate partner violence (IPV) in their lifetime. The most commonly sustained IPV-related brain injuries include strangulation-related alterations in consciousness (S-AICs) and traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). Moreover, survivors of IPV-related S-AICs and/or TBIs often demonstrate psychological distress such as depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress. ⋯ These data underscore the importance of assessing for S-AIC in women who have experienced IPV and when present, to also assess for TBIs and the presence of psychological distress. Unfortunately, there were methodological differences across sites precluding cross-site comparisons. Nonetheless, data were collected across four culturally and geographically diverse countries and, therefore, highlight IPV-related BIs as a global issue that needs to be aggressively studied with policies established and then implemented to address findings.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jul 2024
Cerebral lactate uptake following half-molar sodium lactate therapy in traumatic brain injury : a brief report.
Exogenous sodium lactate has many advantages after traumatic brain injury, including intracranial pressure control and alternative energetic supply. It remains unclear, however, whether half-molar sodium lactate (HSL) is effectively incorporated in brain metabolism, which we can verify using the arteriovenous difference in lactate (AVDlac). Hence we compared the AVDlac in patients with severe traumatic brain injury receiving an equiosmolar bolus of sodium lactate or mannitol for intracranial hypertension (IH) treatment. ⋯ Finally, there were more positive AVDlac values in the group that received HSL and more negative AVDlac values in the group that received mannitol (Fisher exact p = 0.04). Our study reports the first evidence of a positive AVDlac, which corresponds to a net lactate uptake by the brain, in patients who received HSL for severe TBI. Our results constitute a bedside confirmation of the integration of lactate into the brain metabolism and pave the way for a wider dissemination of sodium lactate in the daily clinical care of patients with traumatic brain injury.