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Changes in [F-18]Fluorodeoxyglucose Activities in a Shockwave-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury Model Using Lithotripsy

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Date
2018
Author
Divani, AA
Phan, JA
Salazar, P
SantaCruz, KS
Bachour, O
Mahmoudi, J
Zhu, XH
Pomper, MG
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Abstract
We present a longitudinal study of cerebral metabolism using [F-18]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) in a rat model of shockwave-induced traumatic brain injury (SW-TBI). Anesthetized rats received 5 or 10 SW pulses to the right anterior lateral or dorsal frontal regions using SW lithotripsy. Animals were scanned for FDG uptake at baseline, 3h post-injury, and 3 days post-injury, using a small animal PET/computed tomography (CT) scanner. FDG uptake at all time-points was quantified as the ratio of brain activity relative to peripheral activity in the left ventricle (LV) in the heart (A(brain)/A(LV)) for the entire brain, each hemisphere, and four cortices (motor, cingulate, somatosensory, and retrosplenial). The mixed-designed models analysis of variance (ANOVA) for the hemispheric and global FDG uptake ratio showed a significant effect of the time-of-scan (p=0.038) and measured region (p=6.12e-09). We also observed a significant effect of the time-of-scan (p=0.046) and measured region (p=2.28e-09) for the FDG uptake ratio in four cortical regions. None of the measurements (global or local) showed a significant effect for the number of SW pulses (5 or 10) or SW location (lateral or dorsal frontal regions). Our data suggest that SW-TBI causes hypermetabolism on the impact side of the rat brain at 3h post-injury compared with the baseline measurements. However, the increase in FDG uptake by day 3 post-injury was not significant. Further studies on post-TBI metabolic changes are needed to understand better the pathophysiology of the injury.
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http://dspace.tbzmed.ac.ir:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/44953
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