Non-invasive in vivo MRI detects long-term microstructural brain alterations related to learning and memory impairments in a model of inflammation-induced white matter injury
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is currently under investigation as a non-invasive tool to monitor neurodevelopmental trajectories and predict risk of cognitive deficits following white matter injury (WMI) in very preterm infants. In the present study, we evaluated the capacity of multimodal MRI (h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioural brain research 2022-06, Vol.428, p.113884-113884, Article 113884 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is currently under investigation as a non-invasive tool to monitor neurodevelopmental trajectories and predict risk of cognitive deficits following white matter injury (WMI) in very preterm infants. In the present study, we evaluated the capacity of multimodal MRI (high-resolution T2-weighted imaging and diffusion tensor imaging)to assess changes following WMI and their relationship to learning and memory performance in Wistar rats as it has been demonstrated for preterm infants. Multimodal MRI performed at P31-P32 shown that animals exposed to neonatal LPS could be classified into two groups: minimal and overt injury. Animals with overt injury had significantly enlarged ventricles, hippocampal atrophy, diffusivity changes in hippocampal white and gray matter, in the striatum and the cortex. Following neonatal LPS exposure, animals presented learning and memory impairments as shown at the fear conditioning test at P36-P38. The severity of learning and memory deficits was related to increased mean diffusivity in the hippocampal region. In conclusion, non-invasive multimodal MRI (volumetric and DTI) assessed and classified the extent of injury at long-term following neonatal LPS exposure. Microstructural changes in the hippocampus at DTI were associated to learning and memory impairments. This further highlights the utility of multimodal MRI as a non-invasive quantitative biomarker following perinatal inflammation.
•Multimodal MRI (volumetric and DTI) allows to classify the extent of injury following neonatal exposure to LPS.•Severity of learning and memory impairments increases with the extent of injury during fear conditioning test.•Increase in mean diffusivity in the hippocampus regions was associated to learning and memory deficits. |
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ISSN: | 0166-4328 1872-7549 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bbr.2022.113884 |