ABSTRACT
Blast-induced traumatic brain injury (blast-TBI) is associated with vestibulomotor dysfunction, persistent post-traumatic headaches and post-traumatic stress disorder, requiring extensive treatments and reducing quality-of-life. Treatment and prevention of these devastating outcomes require an understanding of their underlying pathophysiology through studies that take advantage of animal models. Here, we report that cranium-directed blast-TBI in rats results in signs of pain that last at least 8 weeks after injury. These occur without significantly elevated behavioural markers of anxiety-like conditions and are not associated with glial up-regulation in sensory thalamic nuclei. These injuries also produce transient vestibulomotor abnormalities that resolve within 3 weeks of injury. Thus, blast-TBI in rats recapitulates aspects of the human condition.
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Acknowledgments
This work was supported, in part, by a grant to JMS from the Veterans Administration (5I01BX001629). The supporting agency had no involvement in study design, data interpretation, writing, or submission of this manuscript.