Treating Traumatic Brain Injury with Exercise: Onset Delay and Previous Training as Key Factors Determining its Efficacy

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Abstract

Purpose: Exercise reduces cognitive deficits in traumatic brain injury (TBI), but early post-trauma exercise is often discouraged due to potential harm. The purpose was to evaluate the interaction between pre- and post-injury physical exercise on cognition, neuronal survival and inflammation. Methods: Rats were either sham-operated and kept sedentary (Sham) or subjected to controlled cortical impact injury and then distributed into sedentary (Tbi), pre-injury exercise (Pre-Tbi), post-injury exercise with early (24 hours, Tbi-early) or late (6 days, Tbi-late) onset, and a combination of pre- and post-injury exercise with early (Pre-Tbi-early) or late (Pre-Tbi-late) onset. Object recognition memory, hippocampal volume, neuronal survival (NeuN+) in the hippocampus and perirhinal cortex, and microglial activity (Iba-1) in the hippocampus were evaluated. Results: All exercise conditions, except TBI-early, attenuated the significant memory impairment at 24-hour retention caused by TBI. Additionally, Pre-TBI-early treatment led to memory improvement at 3-hour retention. Pre-TBI reduced neuronal death and microglial activation in the hippocampus. TBI-late, but not TBI-early, mitigated hippocampal volume loss, loss of mature neurons in the hippocampus, and inflammation. Combining pre-injury and early-onset exercise reduced memory deficits but did not affect neuronal death or microglial activation. Combining pre-injury and late-onset exercise had a similar memory-enhancing effect than late post-injury treatment alone, albeit with reduced effects on neuronal density and neuroinflammation. Conclusions: Pre-TBI physical exercise reduces the necessary onset delay of post-TBI exercise to obtain cognitive benefits, yet the exact mechanisms underlying this reduction require further research.

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APA

Sánchez-Martín, T., Costa-Miserachs, D., Coll-Andreu, M., Portell-Cortés, I., García-Brito, S., & Torras-Garcia, M. (2024). Treating Traumatic Brain Injury with Exercise: Onset Delay and Previous Training as Key Factors Determining its Efficacy. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, 38(10), 715–728. https://doi.org/10.1177/15459683241270023

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