4.7 Article

Sex differences in the effects of mild traumatic brain injury and progesterone treatment on anxiety-like behavior and fear conditioning in rats

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EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY
卷 365, 期 -, 页码 -

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ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2023.114415

关键词

Social defeat; PTSD; Estrous cycle; Elevated plus maze; Novel object

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Mild traumatic brain injuries (mild TBIs) commonly occur in young adults in high-stress environments. Sex differences have been observed in the development of post-concussive anxiety and PTSD-like behaviors. Progesterone, which has neuroprotective properties, does not effectively prevent psychological symptoms associated with mild TBI in male and female rats. Overall, both sex and estrous cycle contribute to psychological outcomes following mild TBI, and sex steroids may play a role as a moderator rather than a treatment for these symptoms.
Mild traumatic brain injuries (mild TBIs) commonly occur in young adults of both sexes, oftentimes in high-stress environments. In humans, sex differences have been observed in the development of post-concussive anxiety and PTSD-like behaviors. Progesterone, a sex steroid that has neuroprotective properties, restores cognitive function in animal models following more severe TBI, but its effectiveness in preventing the psychological symptoms associated with mild TBI has not been evaluated. Using a model of mild TBI that pairs a social stressor (social defeat) with weight drop, male and naturally estrous-cycling female rats were treated with 4 mg/kg progesterone or vehicle once daily for 5 days after injury. Behavioral measures, including elevated plus maze (EPM), contextual fear conditioning, and novel object recognition (NOR) were assessed following progesterone treat-ment. Anxiety-like behavior was increased by mild TBI in male rats, with a smaller effect seen in female rats in the diestrus phase at the time of EPM testing. In contrast, mild TBI impaired fear learning in female rats in estrus at the time of fear acquisition. Progesterone treatment failed to attenuate post-mild TBI anxiety-like behavior in either sex. Furthermore, progesterone increased fear conditioning and impaired NOR discrimination in male rats, independent of TBI status. Overall, both sex and estrous cycle contributed to psychological outcomes following mild TBI, which were not ameliorated by post-TBI progesterone. This suggests sex steroids play an important role as a moderator of the expression of mild TBI-induced psychological symptoms, rather than as a potential treatment for their underlying etiology.

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