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Traumatic Brain Injury and Mountains
Author(s) -
M.S. Shuvalova,
Yu. Shidakov,
D.Z. Zhanuzakov,
А Б Мамытова
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
bûlletenʹ nauki i praktiki
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2414-2948
DOI - 10.33619/2414-2948/70/32
Subject(s) - traumatic brain injury , cerebellum , medicine , microcirculation , traumatic shock , shock (circulatory) , psychiatry
Today, the traumatic epidemic is gaining momentum around the world. Having a complex pathogenesis, many aspects of the development and impact of traumatic brain injury (TBI) on the body remain undescribed. In particular, there is practically no information about the state of the body after a traumatic brain injury received in the highlands. The aim of the study is to establish the features of animal behavior, homeostatic blood parameters and functional morphology of the cerebellum in TBI in the highlands. The work was performed on 46 white male mongrel rats. The low-mountain series of experiments was modeled at an altitude of 760 m above sea level (Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek), the high-mountain series — at the Tuya-Ashu pass — 3200 m above sea level (Kyrgyzstan). The Weight Drop Method shock model was used to reproduce a traumatic brain injury. The ethology of animals was evaluated in the Open Field test. The lactic acid level was determined in the AQUA LAB (Bishkek). The microcirculation of the cerebellum was examined under the Olympus B×40 microscope (Japan). Statistical data processing was carried out in the SPSS 16.0 program. The visit to the outer squares of the field during TBI decreases (P<0.001) regardless of the height of the experiments, the number of racks in the highlands decreases by 60% (P < 0.001), the number of peeks into minks — by 76 % (P<0.01). The number of acts of defecation after TBI increases. The biochemical parameters of blood in TBI are characterized by an increase in the deficit of buffer bases to −3.8 mmol/l, a drop in the rate of oxygen consumption to 2.5 ml/min, an increase in the ratio between the rate of oxygen transport by arterial blood and the rate of its consumption to 4.8 rel. unit, and the concentration of lactic acid in the blood is up to 5 mmol/l. The microcirculatory bed of the cerebellum in TBI in the highlands is characterized by increased tortuosity, the appearance of swellings and interceptions along the course of blood vessels, activation of anastomoses, increased vascular porosity, hypercapillarization with erythrocyte sludge, parietal standing of leukocytes, the formation of blood clots in all parts of the vascular bed. There is vasogenic swelling of the cerebellum with the phenomena of dislocation of layers.

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