Abstract
Cerebrovascular disruption and cortical pathology resulting from either moderate (M-TBI) or severe (S-TBI) traumatic brain injury produced by a pneumatically-driven cortical contusion device were assessed in adult male rats sacrificed at 6 and 24 h or 8 and 30 days after injury to the right sensorimotor cortex. Epidural, subdural, subarachnoid, petechial (cortex and corpus callosum), and/or intraventricular hemorrhage was present in all animals, more extensively and severely following S-TBI. At 6 or 24 h after TBI, acidophilic (acid fuchsinpositive) neurons were numerous and widespread (S-TBI > M-TBI) in the ipsilateral contused cortex. By 8 days few acidophilic neurons were present in peri-impact regions of the ipsilateral neocortex, and none were detected in cortex 30 days postinjury. Both M-TBI and S-TBI groups had enlarged ipsilateral cortical volumes (edema) at 6 and 24 h postcontusion. Eight and 30 days after injury the mean volume of cortical necrosis was significantly larger in S-TBI than in M-TBI rats, and cortical necrosis in both TBI conditions increased between 8 to 30 days postinjury. These results indicate that this pneumatically-driven contusion device produces reliable and consistent primary and secondary cortical histopathology, the extent of which is related to the severity of initial injury.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
