Early single-dose exosome treatment improves neurologic outcomes in a 7-day swine model of traumatic brain injury and hemorrhagic shock

BACKGROUND Early single-dose treatment with human mesenchymal stem cell–derived exosomes promotes neuroprotection and promotes blood-brain barrier integrity in models of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and hemorrhagic shock (HS) in swine. The impact of an early single dose of exosomes on late survival (7 days), however, remains unknown. We sought to evaluate the impact of early single-dose exosome treatment on neurologic outcomes, brain lesion size, inflammatory cytokines, apoptotic markers, and mediators of neural plasticity in a 7-day survival model. METHODS Yorkshire swine were subjected to a severe TBI (8-mm cortical impact) and HS (40% estimated total blood volume). After 1 hour of shock, animals were randomized (n = 4/cohort) to receive either lactated Ringer's (5 mL) or lactated Ringer's with exosomes (1 × 1012 exosome particles). After an additional hour of shock, animals were resuscitated with normal saline. Daily neurologic severity scores were compared. At 7 days following injury, lesion size, inflammatory markers, and mediators of inflammation (NF-κB), apoptosis (BAX), and neural plasticity (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) in brain tissue were compared between groups. RESULTS Exosome-treated animals had significantly lower neurologic severity scores (first 4 days; p
Source: The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care - Category: Orthopaedics Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLES Source Type: research