Diffuse Axonal Injury: Clinical Prognostic Factors, Molecular Experimental Models and the Impact of the Trauma Related Oxidative Stress. An Extensive Review Concerning Milestones and Advances.
Mauro PalmieriAlessandro FratiAntonio SantoroPaola FratiVittorio FineschiAlessandro PescePublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a condition burdened by an extremely high rate of morbidity and mortality and can result in an overall disability rate as high as 50% in affected individuals. Therefore, the importance of identifying clinical prognostic factors for diffuse axonal injury (DAI) in (TBI) is commonly recognized as critical. The aim of the present review paper is to evaluate the most recent contributions from the relevant literature in order to understand how each single prognostic factor determinates the severity of the clinical syndrome associated with DAI. The main clinical factors with an important impact on prognosis in case of DAI are glycemia, early GCS, the peripheral oxygen saturation, blood pressure, and time to recover consciousness. In addition, the severity of the lesion, classified on the ground of the cerebral anatomical structures involved after the trauma, has a strong correlation with survival after DAI. In conclusion, modern findings concerning the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress in DAI suggest that biomarkers such as GFAP, pNF-H, NF-L, microtubule associated protein tau, Aβ42, S-100β, NSE, AQP4, Drp-1, and NCX represent a possible critical target for future pharmaceutical treatments to prevent the damages caused by DAI.
Keyphrases
- prognostic factors
- traumatic brain injury
- oxidative stress
- blood pressure
- reactive oxygen species
- systematic review
- dna damage
- type diabetes
- spinal cord injury
- metabolic syndrome
- signaling pathway
- skeletal muscle
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- high resolution
- adipose tissue
- severe traumatic brain injury
- mass spectrometry
- heart rate
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebrospinal fluid
- toll like receptor
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- cerebral ischemia