Decoding Hippocampal Signaling Deficits After Traumatic Brain Injury
- 10 November 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Translational Stroke Research
- Vol. 2 (4), 546-555
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12975-011-0123-z
Abstract
There are more than 3.17 million people coping with long-term disabilities due to traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States. The majority of TBI research is focused on developing acute neuroprotective treatments to prevent or minimize these long-term disabilities. Therefore, chronic TBI survivors represent a large, underserved population that could significantly benefit from a therapy that capitalizes on the endogenous recovery mechanisms occurring during the weeks to months following brain trauma. Previous studies have found that the hippocampus is highly vulnerable to brain injury, in both experimental models of TBI and during human TBI. Although often not directly mechanically injured by the head injury, in the weeks to months following TBI, the hippocampus undergoes atrophy and exhibits deficits in long-term potentiation (LTP), a persistent increase in synaptic strength that is considered to be a model of learning and memory. Decoding the chronic hippocampal LTP and cell signaling deficits after brain trauma will provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms of hippocampal-dependent learning impairments caused by TBI and facilitate the development of effective therapeutic strategies to improve hippocampal-dependent learning for chronic survivors of TBI.Keywords
This publication has 125 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Longitudinal Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study of Mild Traumatic Brain InjuryJournal of Neurotrauma, 2011
- Differential effects and rates of normal aging in cerebellum and hippocampusProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010
- Recovery of Afferent Function and Synaptic Strength in Hippocampal CA1 following Traumatic Brain InjuryJournal of Neurotrauma, 2009
- Deficits in ERK and CREB activation in the hippocampus after traumatic brain injuryNeuroscience Letters, 2009
- Inhibition of NR2B Phosphorylation Restores Alterations in NMDA Receptor Expression and Improves Functional Recovery following Traumatic Brain Injury in MiceJournal of Neurotrauma, 2008
- Moderate and severe traumatic brain injury in adultsThe Lancet Neurology, 2008
- Alterations in neuronal calcium levels are associated with cognitive deficits after traumatic brain injuryNeuroscience Letters, 2008
- Traumatic brain injury causes a long‐lasting calcium (Ca2+)‐plateau of elevated intracellular Ca levels and altered Ca2+ homeostatic mechanisms in hippocampal neurons surviving brain injuryEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2008
- Modulation of the cAMP signaling pathway after traumatic brain injuryExperimental Neurology, 2007
- Brain injury impairs dentate gyrus inhibitory efficacyNeurobiology of Disease, 2007