Author/Authors :
Teutsch, Peyton VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, USA , E. Jones, Carolyn VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, USA , E. Kaiser, Mara VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, USA , Avalon Gardner, Natasha VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, USA , M. Lim, Miranda VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, USA
Abstract :
Study Objectives. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) commonly cooccur. Approaches to
research and treatment of these disorders have been segregated, despite overlapping symptomology. We and others have
hypothesized that comorbid TBI + PTSD generates worse symptoms than either condition alone. We present a mouse model of
comorbid TBI + PTSD to further explore this condition. Methods. A mouse model of TBI + PTSD was generated using the single
prolonged stress (SPS) protocol in combination with the controlled cortical impact (CCI) protocol. This resulted in four
experimental groups: control, TBI, PTSD, and TBI + PTSD. Behavioral phenotyping included gait analysis, contextual fear
conditioning, acoustic startle response, and prepulse inhibition. Results. Mice in the TBI + PTSD group showed a significantly
impaired gait compared to their counterparts with TBI alone as well as control mice. Mice in the TBI + PTSD group showed
significantly impaired contextual fear recall compared to controls. Prepulse inhibition testing revealed intact acoustic startle and
auditory sensory gating. Conclusions. These results indicate that SPS paired with CCI in mice produces unique behavioral
impairments in gait and fear recall that are not present in either condition alone. Further studies are underway to examine
additional behavioral, physiological, and pathological phenotypes in this combined model of TBI + PTSD.
Keywords :
Gait , Conditioned Fear Impairments , Mouse Model , TBI and PTSD