Neurobehavioral Impairments Predict Specific Cerebral Damage in Rat Model of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage.

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Translational Stroke Research Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-26 DOI:10.1007/s12975-023-01180-2
Daniel G Lynch, Kevin A Shah, Keren Powell, Steven Wadolowski, Willians Tambo, Joshua J Strohl, Prashin Unadkat, David Eidelberg, Patricio T Huerta, Chunyan Li
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Abstract

Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a severe form of stroke that can cause unpredictable and diffuse cerebral damage, which is difficult to detect until it becomes irreversible. Therefore, there is a need for a reliable method to identify dysfunctional regions and initiate treatment before permanent damage occurs. Neurobehavioral assessments have been suggested as a possible tool to detect and approximately localize dysfunctional cerebral regions. In this study, we hypothesized that a neurobehavioral assessment battery could be a sensitive and specific method for detecting damage in discrete cerebral regions following SAH. To test this hypothesis, a behavioral battery was employed at multiple time points after SAH induced via an endovascular perforation, and brain damage was confirmed via postmortem histopathological analysis. Our results demonstrate that impairment of sensorimotor function accurately predict damage in the cerebral cortex (AUC 0.905; sensitivity 81.8%; specificity 90.9%) and striatum (AUC 0.913; sensitivity 90.1%; specificity 100%), while impaired novel object recognition is a more accurate indicator of damage to the hippocampus (AUC 0.902; sensitivity 74.1%; specificity 83.3%) than impaired reference memory (AUC 0.746; sensitivity 72.2%; specificity 58.0%). Tests for anxiety-like and depression-like behaviors predict damage to the amygdala (AUC 0.900; sensitivity 77.0%; specificity 81.7%) and thalamus (AUC 0.963; sensitivity 86.3%; specificity 87.8%), respectively. This study suggests that recurring behavioral testing can accurately predict damage in specific brain regions, which could be developed into a clinical battery for early detection of SAH damage in humans, potentially improving early treatment and outcomes.

Abstract Image

大鼠蛛网膜下腔出血模型的神经行为障碍可预测特定的脑损伤
蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)是脑卒中的一种严重形式,可造成不可预测的弥漫性脑损伤,这种损伤在变得不可逆转之前很难被发现。因此,需要一种可靠的方法来识别功能障碍区域,并在永久性损伤发生之前开始治疗。神经行为评估被认为是检测和大致定位功能障碍脑区的一种可能工具。在本研究中,我们假设神经行为评估组可能是检测 SAH 后离散脑区损伤的一种敏感而特异的方法。为了验证这一假设,我们在通过血管内穿孔诱发 SAH 后的多个时间点采用了行为评估方法,并通过死后组织病理学分析确认了脑损伤。我们的研究结果表明,感觉运动功能受损能准确预测大脑皮层(AUC 0.905;灵敏度 81.8%;特异度 90.9%)和纹状体(AUC 0.913;灵敏度 90.1%;特异度 100% )的损伤,而新物体识别受损比参考记忆受损(AUC 0.746;灵敏度 72.2%;特异度 58.0%)更能准确预测海马体的损伤(AUC 0.902;灵敏度 74.1%;特异度 83.3%)。焦虑样行为和抑郁样行为测试可分别预测杏仁核(AUC 0.900;灵敏度 77.0%;特异度 81.7%)和丘脑(AUC 0.963;灵敏度 86.3%;特异度 87.8%)的损伤。这项研究表明,循环行为测试能准确预测特定脑区的损伤,可将其开发成临床电池,用于早期检测人类的 SAH 损伤,从而改善早期治疗和预后。
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来源期刊
Translational Stroke Research
Translational Stroke Research CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
4.30%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Translational Stroke Research covers basic, translational, and clinical studies. The Journal emphasizes novel approaches to help both to understand clinical phenomenon through basic science tools, and to translate basic science discoveries into the development of new strategies for the prevention, assessment, treatment, and enhancement of central nervous system repair after stroke and other forms of neurotrauma. Translational Stroke Research focuses on translational research and is relevant to both basic scientists and physicians, including but not restricted to neuroscientists, vascular biologists, neurologists, neuroimagers, and neurosurgeons.
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