Even mild traumatic brain injuries can kill brain tissue

Scientists have watched a mild traumatic brain injury play out in the living brain, prompting swelling that reduces blood flow and connections between neurons to die.

“Even with a mild trauma, we found we still have these ischemic blood vessels and, if blood flow is not returned to normal, synapses start to die,” said Dr. Sergei Kirov, neuroscientist and Director of the Human Brain Lab at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University.

They also found that subsequent waves of depolarization – when brain cells lose their normal positive and negative charge – quickly and dramatically increase the losses.

Even-mild-traumatic-brain-injuries-can-kill-brain-tissueResearchers hope the increased understanding of this secondary damage in the hours following an injury will point toward better therapy for the 1.7 million Americans annually experiencing traumatic brain injuries from falls, automobile accidents, sports, combat and the like. While strategies can minimize impact, no true neuroprotective drugs exist, likely because of inadequate understanding about how damage unfolds after the immediate impact.

Kirov is corresponding author of a study in the journal Brain describing the use of two-photon laser scanning microscopy to provide real-time viewing of submicroscopic neurons, their branches and more at the time of impact and in the following hours.

Scientists watched as astrocytes – smaller cells that supply neurons with nutrients and help maintain normal electrical activity and blood flow – in the vicinity of the injury swelled quickly and significantly. Each neuron is surrounded by several astrocytes that ballooned up about 25 percent, smothering the neurons and connective branches they once supported.

“We saw every branch, every small wire and how it gets cut,” Kirov said. “We saw how it destroys networks. It really goes downhill. It’s the first time we know of that someone has watched this type of minor injury play out over the course of 24 hours.”

Stressed neurons ran out of energy and became silent but could still survive for hours, potentially giving physicians time to intervene, unless depolarization follows. Without sufficient oxygen and energy, internal pumps that ensure proper polarity by removing sodium and pulling potassium into neurons, can stop working and dramatically accelerate brain-cell death.

“Like the plus and minus ends of a battery, neurons must have a negative charge inside and a positive charge outside to fire,” Kirov said. Firing enables communication, including the release of chemical messengers called neurotransmitters.

“If you have six hours to save tissue when you have just lost part of your blood flow, with this spreading depolarization, you lose tissue within minutes,” he said.

While common in head trauma, spreading depolarization would not typically occur in less-traumatic injuries, like his model. His model was chemically induced to reveal more about how this collateral damage occurs and whether neurons could still be saved. Interestingly, researchers found that without the initial injury, brain cells completely recovered after re-polarization but only partially recovered in the injury model.

While very brief episodes of depolarization occur as part of the healthy firing of neurons, spreading depolarization exacerbates the initial traumatic brain injury in more than half of patients and results in poor prognosis, previous research has shown. However, a 2011 review in the journal Nature Medicine indicated that short-lived waves can actually protect surrounding brain tissue. Kirov and his colleagues wrote that more study is needed to determine when to intervene.

One of Kirov’s many next steps is exploring the controversy about whether astrocytes’ swelling in response to physical trauma is a protective response or puts the cells in destruct mode. He also wants to explore better ways to protect the brain from the growing damage that can follow even a slight head injury.

Currently, drugs such as diuretics and anti-seizure medication may be used to help reduce secondary damage of traumatic brain injury. Astrocytes can survive without neurons but the opposite is not true, Kirov said. The ratio of astrocytes to neurons is higher in humans and human astrocytes are more complex, Kirov said.


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1 thought on “Even mild traumatic brain injuries can kill brain tissue”

  1. sir/madam,

    There is a saying that what is statistically important need not be clinically relevant.What is described here is chemically induced models.But there are many protective factors also playing to oppose these damages being wrought on the neurones.The cushioning or the buffering effect of CSF is one of them.Some neuronal death will be seen in the lab but that wont cause a significant functional impairment.Also neuronal plasticity helps recruitment of new neurones to the injured site.The lobectomised patients for certain indications gets better after they lose a few grams of brain tissue.Less is better at times.Proper grading and timely intervention improves the outcome.Depolarisation is the movement of potassium inwards and sodium outwards.A repolarisation wave follows from behind this DP wave.This becomes erratic during a mild TBI injury called as concussion where there is a physiological insult upon the neural integrity.There is a reversible conduction block which cannot be serious in healthy individuals but can cause secondary damage who have other systemic disorders like uncontrolled DM/HT/IHD to name just a few.The presence or absence of other organ dysfunction is also important.Initial unconciousness with a near normal GCS can still pose a diagnostic problem.

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