Craniectomy Position Affects Morris Water Maze Performance and Hippocampal Cell Loss after Parasagittal Fluid Percussion
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Neurotrauma
- Vol. 19 (3) , 303-316
- https://doi.org/10.1089/089771502753594873
Abstract
Valid and reliable animal models are essential for mechanistic and therapeutic studies of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Therefore, model characterization is a continual and reciprocal process between the experimental laboratory and the clinic. Several excellent experimental models of TBI, including the lateral fluid percussion rat model, are currently in wide use in many neurotrauma laboratories. However, small differences in the position of lateral fluid percussion craniectomy are reported between labs. Additionally, differences in hippocampal cell death have also been reported. Therefore, we hypothesized that small changes in craniectomy position could affect commonly used outcome measures such as vestibulomotor function, Morris water maze (MWM) performance, hippocampal cell loss, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) immunoreactivity. Four placements were systematically manipulated: rostral, caudal, medial, and lateral. The medial and caudal placements produced significantly greater impairments in the MWM acquisition task over the lateral and rostral placements. The rostral placement produced diffuse cortical damage but little hippocampal cell loss. In contrast, the medial, lateral, and caudal placements produced more mid-dorsally localized cortical damage and significant cell loss in the CA2/CA3 and hilus ipsilateral to the injury site. Furthermore, reactive astrocytosis was more pronounced in the medial, lateral, and caudal placements than in the rostral placement. All craniectomy position groups had similar durations of traumatic unconsciousness and similar impairment on motor tasks. We conclude that small alterations in craniectomy position produce differences in cognitive performance, hippocampal cell loss, and reactive astrocytosis but not in motor performance nor transient unconsciousness.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Responses to cortical injury: I. Methodology and local effects of contusions in the ratPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Fentanyl Infusion Preserves Cerebral Blood Flow During Decreased Arterial Blood Pressure After Traumatic Brain Injury in CatsJournal of Neurotrauma, 1998
- Chronic histopathological consequences of fluid-percussion brain injury in rats: effects of post-traumatic hypothermiaActa Neuropathologica, 1997
- Intermediate filament change in astrocytes following mild cortical contusionGlia, 1996
- A behavioural analysis of rats with damage to the medial prefrontal cortex using the morris water maze: evidence for behavioural flexibility, but not for impaired spatial navigationBrain Research, 1994
- Early Microvascular and Neuronal Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury: A Light and Electron Microscopic Study in RatsJournal of Neurotrauma, 1994
- The Use of the Morris Water Maze in the Study of Memory and LearningInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1989
- The effects of ibotenic acid lesions of the nucleus accumbens on spatial learning and extinction in the ratBehavioural Brain Research, 1989
- Physiologic, Histopathologic, and Cineradiographic Characterization of a New Fluid–Percussion Model of Experimental Brain Injury in the RatJournal of Neurotrauma, 1988
- A fluid percussion model of experimental brain injury in the ratJournal of Neurosurgery, 1987