Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of accident-related death and disability in the world and can lead to long-term neuropsychiatric symptoms, such as a decline in cognitive function and neurodegeneration. TBI includes primary and secondary injury, with head trauma and deformation of the brain caused by the physical force of the impact as primary injury, and cellular and molecular cascades that lead to cell death as secondary injury. Currently, there is no treatment for TBI-induced cell damage and neural circuit dysfunction in the brain, and thus, it is important to understand the underlying cellular mechanisms that lead to cell damage. In the current study, we use stretchable microelectrode arrays (sMEAs) to model the primary injury of TBI to study the electrophysiological effects of physically injuring cortical cells. We recorded electrophysiological activity before injury and then stretched the flexible membrane of the sMEAs to injure the cells to varying degrees. At 1, 24, and 72h post-stretch, we recorded activity to analyze differences in spike rate, Fano factor, burstlet rate, burstlet width, synchrony of firing, local network efficiency, and Q statistic. Our results demonstrate that mechanical injury changes the firing properties of cortical neuron networks in culture in a time- and severity-dependent manner. Our results suggest that changes to electrophysiological properties after stretch are dependent on the strength of synchronization between neurons prior to injury.
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