HighlightsSeverity of post‐mTBI deficits correlates with endogenous opioid system activity.Increased opioid tone protects against mTBI‐induced memory deficits.Naloxone impairs memory and exacerbates depressive‐like behavior only in HA mice.mTBI strongly induces depressive‐like… Click to show full abstract
HighlightsSeverity of post‐mTBI deficits correlates with endogenous opioid system activity.Increased opioid tone protects against mTBI‐induced memory deficits.Naloxone impairs memory and exacerbates depressive‐like behavior only in HA mice.mTBI strongly induces depressive‐like behavior in LA mice Abstract The neuroprotective role of the endogenous opioid system in the pathophysiological sequelae of brain injury remains largely ambiguous. Noteworthy, almost no data is available on how its genetically determined activity influences the outcome of mild traumatic brain injury. Thus, the aim of our study was to examine the effect of opioid receptor blockage on cognitive impairments produced by mild traumatic brain injury in mice selectively bred for high (HA) and low (LA) swim‐stress induced analgesia that show innate divergence in opioid system activity. Mild traumatic brain injury was induced with a weight‐drop device on anaesthetized mice. Naloxone (5 mg/kg) was intraperitoneally delivered twice a day for 7 days to non‐selectively block opioid receptors. Spatial memory performance and manifestations of depressive‐like behavior were assessed using the Morris Water Maze and tail suspension tests, respectively. Mild traumatic brain injury resulted in a significant deterioration of spatial memory performance and severity of depressive‐like behavior in the LA mouse line as opposed to HA mice. Opioid receptor blockage with naloxone unmasked cognitive deficits in HA mice but was without effect in the LA line. The results suggest a protective role of genetically predetermined enhanced opioid system activity in suppression of mild brain trauma‐induced cognitive impairments. Mice selected for high and low swim stress‐induced analgesia might therefore be a useful model to study the involvement of the opioid system in the pathophysiology and neurological outcome of traumatic brain injury.
               
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