Mild concussive head injury results in increased brain substance P immunoreactivity

Date

2004

Authors

Donkin, J.
Cernak, I.
Rodgers, K.
Vink, R.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Conference paper

Citation

7th International Neurotrauma Symposium, Adelaide, Australia, 12-16 September, 2004: pp.75-78

Statement of Responsibility

J.J. Donkin, I. Cernak, K.M. Rodgers and R. Vink

Conference Name

International Neurotrauma Symposium (7th : 2004 : Adelaide, S. Aust.)

Abstract

The neuroinflammatory neuropeptide substance P (SP) has been implicated in oedema development following traumatic brain injury. Whether the neuropeptide plays a role in concussive head injury is unknown. Accordingly, we have used a newly developed model of mild head injury in rats to characterise the release of SP following concussive brain injury. Following brain trauma, there was no evidence of motor or cognitive deficits over the ensuing 3 weeks. Despite this, increased SP immunoreactivity was present in perivascular axons, some pyramidal neurones and astrocytes when compared to sham animals. Our findings suggest that concussive brain injury predisposes an individual to diffuse brain swelling, which may have implications in the management of sports related concussion.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

The document attached has been archived with permission from the Medimond International Proceedings Division. An external link to the publisher’s web site is included.

Access Status

Rights

© 2004 by MEDIMOND

License

Grant ID

Published Version

Call number

Persistent link to this record