Co-administration of TiO2 nanowired cerebrolysin and alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone has superior neuroprotective effects on brain pathology following concussive head injury after Sleep deprivation

by Sharma, Aruna; Muresanu, Dafin Fior; Lafuente, Jose Vicente; Nozari, Ala; Patnaik, Ranjana; Ozkizilcik, Asya; Tian, Z. Ryan; Mossier, Herbert; Sharma, Hari Shanker

Sleep deprivation (SD) is a serious problem in military personnel during combat operations. Previous observations from our laboratory showed marked brain pathology following SD in rats from 12 h to 72 h in a progressive manner. In this innovation we demonstrate that a an additional concussive head injury (CHI) that is very common in soldiers during combat operation could exacerbate SD induced brain damage and behavioral dysfunction. We found a several fold increase in BBB permeability to Evans blue albumin (EBA) and radioiodine ([131]-I), brain edema in several brain regions associated with neuronal injuries after CHI in SD at 48 h. Interestingly, the brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels and alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (-MSH) showed greater decline in CHI animals after SD. Thus, TiO2 nanowired tdelivery of cerebrolysin (2.5 ml/kg, i.v.) together with -MSH 4 to 6 h after CHI in SD significantly increased BDNF and -MSH levels and reduced brain pathology seen at 48 h. This treatment also improved behavioral functions significantly in CHI rats after SD. These observations are the first to show that nanodelivery of cerebrolysin with a-MSH has superior neuroprotective effects in SD following CHI, not reported earlier.

Conference
11th Annual TechConnect World Innovation Conference and Expo, Held Jointly with the 20th Annual Nanotech Conference and Expo, the 2018 SBIR/STTR Spring Innovation Conference, and the Defense TechConnect DTC Spring Conference
Year
2018
Division
77-80
URL
https://briefs.techconnect.org/papers/co-administration-of-tio2-nanowired-cerebrolysin-and-alpha-melanocyte-stimulating-hormone-has-superior-neuroprotective-effects-on-brain-pathology-following-concussive-head-injury-after-sleep-deprivati/