Journal article

Tibial fracture exacerbates traumatic brain injury outcomes and neuroinflammation in a novel mouse model of multitrauma

SR Shultz, M Sun, DK Wright, RD Brady, S Liu, S Beynon, SF Schmidt, AH Kaye, JA Hamilton, TJ O'Brien, BL Grills, SJ McDonald

Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC | Published : 2015

Abstract

Multitrauma is a common medical problem worldwide, and often involves concurrent traumatic brain injury (TBI) and bone fracture. Despite the high incidence of combined TBI and fracture, preclinical TBI research commonly employs independent injury models that fail to incorporate the pathophysiologic interactions occurring in multitrauma. Here, we developed a novel mouse model of multitrauma, and investigated whether bone fracture worsened TBI outcomes. Male mice were assigned into four groups: sham-TBI+sham-fracture (SHAM); sham-TBI+fracture (FX); TBI+sham-fracture (TBI); and TBI+fracture (MULTI). The injury methods included a closed-skull weight-drop TBI model and a closed tibial fracture. A..

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University of Melbourne Researchers