Articles: traumatic-brain-injuries.
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Managing patients with acute brain injury in the neurocritical care (NCC) unit has become increasingly complex because of technological advances and increasing information derived from multiple data sources. Diverse data streams necessitate innovative approaches for clinicians to understand interactions between recorded variables. Unsupervised clustering integrates different data streams and could be supportive. ⋯ Unsupervised clustering can be used to phenotype NCC patients, especially patients with TBI, in diverse disease stages and identify clusters that may be used for prognostication. Despite the need for validation studies, this methodology could help to improve outcome prediction models, diagnostics, and understanding of pathophysiology. Registration number: PROSPERO: CRD4202347097676.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Nov 2024
Genetic Differences Modify Anesthetic Preconditioning of Traumatic Brain Injury in Drosophila.
Pre-clinical vertebrate models of traumatic brain injury (TBI) routinely use anesthetics for animal welfare; however, humans experience TBI without anesthetics. Therefore, translation of findings from vertebrate models to humans hinges on understanding how anesthetics influence cellular and molecular events that lead to secondary injuries following TBI. To investigate the effects of anesthetics on TBI outcomes, we used an invertebrate Drosophila melanogaster model to compare outcomes between animals exposed or not exposed to anesthetics prior to the same primary injury. ⋯ Finally, genome-wide association study analyses identified single-nucleotide polymorphisms in genes associated with isoflurane or sevoflurane preconditioning of TBI. Several of the genes, including the fly ortholog of mammalian Calcium Voltage-Gated Subunit Alpha1 D (CACNA1D), are highly expressed in neurons and are functionally linked to both anesthetics and TBI. These data indicate that anesthetic dose and genetic background should be considered when investigating effects of anesthetics in vertebrate TBI models, and they support use of the fly model for elucidating the mechanisms underlying anesthetic preconditioning of TBI.
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Comment Multicenter Study Comparative Study Pragmatic Clinical Trial
Restrictive vs Liberal Transfusion Strategy in Patients With Acute Brain Injury: The TRAIN Randomized Clinical Trial.
Blood transfusions are commonly administered to patients with acute brain injury. The optimal hemoglobin transfusion threshold is uncertain in this patient population. ⋯ Patients with acute brain injury and anemia randomized to a liberal transfusion strategy were less likely to have an unfavorable neurological outcome than those randomized to a restrictive strategy.
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J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. · Nov 2024
Dynamics of synaptic damage in severe traumatic brain injury revealed by cerebrospinal fluid SNAP-25 and VILIP-1.
Biomarkers of neuronal, glial cells and inflammation in traumatic brain injury (TBI) are available but they do not specifically reflect the damage to synapses, which represent the bulk volume of the brain. Experimental models have demonstrated extensive involvement of synapses in acute TBI, but biomarkers of synaptic damage in human patients have not been explored. ⋯ Synaptic damage markers are acutely elevated in severe TBI and predict long-term outcomes, as well as, or better than, markers of neuroaxonal injury. Synaptic damage correlates with initial injury and with a later phase of secondary inflammatory injury.
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Post-traumatic brain injury (TBI) lesions, which combine brain atrophy and white matter injuries, can lead to progressive post-traumatic encephalopathy. However, the specific involvement of the cerebellum, which participates in cognitive, executive, and sensory functions, has been little studied. The aim of this work was to explore the long-term cerebellar consequences of severe TBI. ⋯ This work shows that even if direct cerebellar damage is rare, long-term post-TBI cerebellar lesions can be observed. Therefore, clinical correlates of cerebellar lesions should be considered more systematically.