Document details

Inflammatory response and long-term behavioral assessment after neonatal CO2-pneumothorax: study in a rodent model

Author(s): Miranda, Alice Augusta Macedo ; Roque, Susana ; Miranda, Cláudia Sofia Serre ; Pêgo, José M. ; Correia-Pinto, Jorge

Date: 2018

Persistent ID: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/57899

Origin: RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho

Subject(s): Animals; Animals, Newborn; Carbon Dioxide; Cytokines; Dentate Gyrus; Disease Models, Animal; Interleukin-10; Leukocytes; Male; Pneumothorax, Artificial; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Behavior, Animal; Neonate; Minimally invasive surgery; Pneumothorax; CO2-insufflation; Inflammation; CO -insufflation 2


Description

Background: Carbon-dioxide (CO2)-pneumothorax during minimally invasive surgery induces well-known metabolic changes. However, little is known about its impact on the central nervous system.The aim of this work is to evaluate the acute impact of CO2-pneumothorax over central cytokine response and its long-term effect on animal behavior.Methods: This is an experimental study where neonatal Sprague-Dawley rats are submitted to CO2-pneumothorax. Peripheral and central cytokine response was evaluated 24 h after insufflation, and peripheral immune cell phenotyping was evaluated 24 h and 4 weeks post-insufflation. Progenitor cell survival was evaluated in the hippocampal dentate gyrus, and the behavioral analysis was performed in adulthood to test cognition, anxious-like, and depressive-like behavior.Results: Significantly increased 11-10 levels were observed in the cerebrospinal-fluid (CSF) of animals submitted to CO2-pneurnothorax, while no differences were found in serum. Regarding pro-inflammatory cytokines, no differences were observed in the periphery or centrally. CO2-pneumothorax event did not alter the survival of newborn cells in the hippocampal dentate gyrus, and no impact on long-term behavior was observed.Conclusions: Neonatal animals submitted to CO2-pneumothorax present acutely increased CSF IL-10 levels. The CO2 pneumothorax seems to result in no significant outcome over neurodevelopment as no functional behavioral alterations were observed in adulthood.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Universidade do Minho
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