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Age May Be Hazardous To Outcome Following Traumatic Brain Injury: The Mitochondrial Connection, Lesley Knight Gilmer
Age May Be Hazardous To Outcome Following Traumatic Brain Injury: The Mitochondrial Connection, Lesley Knight Gilmer
University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations
Older individuals sustaining traumatic brain injury (TBI) experience a much higher incidence of morbidity and mortality. This age-related exacerbated response to neurological insult has been demonstrated experimentally in aged animals, which can serve as a model to combat this devastating clinical problem. The reasons for this worse initial response are unknown but may be related to age-related changes in mitochondrial respiration.
Evidence is shown that mitochondrial dysfunction occurs early following traumatic brain injury (TBI), persists long after the initial insult, and is severitydependent. Synaptic and extrasynaptic mitochondrial fractions display distinct respiration capacities, stressing the importance to analyze these fractions separately. …