Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7281055 | Brain, Behavior, and Immunity | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
In the diffuse brain-injured mouse, AT-RvD1 treatment, but not RvE1, mitigated motor and cognitive deficits. RvE1 treatment significantly increased post-traumatic sleep in brain-injured mice compared to all other groups. RvE1 treated mice displayed a higher proportion of ramified microglia and lower proportion of activated rod microglia in the cortex compared to saline or AT-RvD1 treated brain-injured mice. Thus, RvE1 treatment modulated post-traumatic sleep and the inflammatory response to TBI, albeit independently of improvement in motor and cognitive outcome as seen in AT-RvD1-treated mice. This suggests AT-RvD1 may impart functional benefit through mechanisms other than resolution of inflammation alone.
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Authors
Jordan L. Harrison, Rachel K. Rowe, Timothy W. Ellis, Nicole S. Yee, Bruce F. O'Hara, P. David Adelson, Jonathan Lifshitz,