by Morgan Holmes
 
Medical physics professor Jahan Tavakkoli and St. Michael’s researchers are exploring a new method to study concussion and its treatment.
In recent years, many Canadians have become aware of traumatic brain injury (TBI) through the reporting of concussions suffered by hockey players and other athletes. In addition to widespread sports-related injuries, TBIs often occurs as the result of, among other events, automobile collisions, workplace accidents and explosions (military and civilian).
The result of an impact or jolt to the head, or of an injury that penetrates the skull, a TBI disrupts normal brain function. It can result in relatively mild symptoms, such as headaches, memory lapses and mood swings, and more severe effects, such as loss of the ability to speak, see or move certain limbs.
A major public health issue
Ryerson University medical physics professor Jahan Tavakkoli has spent the last few years using acoustic shock waves to expand understanding of the mechanisms involved in and the physiology of TBI, and to lay the groundwork for potential treatments.
"TBI is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries. It is associated," Tavakkoli notes, "with considerable direct and indirect healthcare costs, as well as quality-of-life reductions." Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back up these contentions: in 2010, more than 2.5 million TBIs occurred in the United States, and TBIs contribute to approximately 30 per cent of all injury deaths in that country.
Zebrafish model
Tavakkoli – a world expert in high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) and acoustic shock waves – is carrying out his TBI investigations in collaboration with Andrew Baker, the medical director of the Trauma and Neurosurgery program at St. Michael's Hospital (the men first met in 2012 during a networking event hosted by Ryerson and St. Michael's).
Together, they are developing a zebrafish model of TBI using the hospital's state-of-the-art zebrafish screening facility. Zebrafish, Baker explains, "are an emerging model organism for studies of disease and human brain development because of their high evolutionary homology to humans, rapid procreation rate, suitability for whole-animal in vivo imaging and genomic amenability to large-scale preclinical drug validation."
Tavakkoli and Baker also rely on several highly qualified personnel to assist with their endeavours: on the Ryerson side, Pooya Sobhe Bidari (PhD student) and Arthur Worthington (research engineer); at St. Michael's, Victoria McCutcheon (MSc student) and Eugene Park (research associate).
Methods and results
By applying targeted 1-MHz acoustic shock waves to adult zebrafish brain, Tavakkoli, Baker and their colleagues have been able to produce non-penetrating brain injuries and have learned that zebrafish respond to brain trauma in ways that are similar to mammals. This work has allowed the creation of a novel animal model and methodology to induce controlled brain injury. "We are now able to study concussion in a way that has never been done before," Baker explains. "Because we have characterized this model in detail, we can measure in detail the reaction to concussion; therefore, we can also see in detail the response to new treatments. The potential implications for helping people suffering from TBI and its adverse effects are huge."
In November 2014, Tavakkoli and Baker filed an invention disclosure (to the intellectual property offices at both Ryerson and St. Michael's) based on the novel aspects of the materials and methodology they have thus far developed.
 
  Explore further: Teens with a history of TBI are nearly four times more likely to have used crystal meth 
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Teens with a history of TBI are nearly four times more likely to have used crystal meth
Ontario students between Grades 9 and 12 who said they had a traumatic brain injury in their lifetime, also reported drug use rates two to four times higher than peers with no history of TBI, according to research published ...
Exploring the link between traumatic brain injury and people who are homeless
Homeless people and their health care providers need to know more about traumatic brain injuries to help prevent and treat such injuries, a new study has found.
One in six Ontario adults say they have had a traumatic brain injury in their lifetime
Nearly seventeen per cent of adults surveyed in Ontario said they have suffered a traumatic brain injury that left them unconscious for five minutes or required them to be hospitalized overnight, according to new research. ...
Study finds almost half of homeless men had traumatic brain injury in their life
Almost half of all homeless men who took part in a study by St. Michael's Hospital had suffered at least one traumatic brain injury in their life and 87 per cent of those injuries occurred before the men ...
Homeless with TBI more likely to visit ER
Homeless and vulnerably housed people who have suffered a traumatic brain injury at some point in their life are more likely to visit an Emergency Department, be arrested or incarcerated, or be victims of ...
Recommended for you
Copycat behaviour may assist stroke rehabilitation
Stroke survivors with impaired mobility in their arms appear to significantly improve in both motor function and confidence when they observe an individual performing a task and then mimic their actions.
Brain fitness for a long and healthy life
The strategies for living a long and healthy life are well known and relatively simple, if not always easily executed: Maintain an appropriate weight. Eat the right foods. Exercise. Limit stress.
Potential new drug target may protect against certain neurodegenerative diseases
Penn Medicine researchers have discovered that hypermethylation - the epigenetic ability to turn down or turn off a bad gene implicated in 10 to 30 percent of patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) ...
Power naps produce a significant improvement in memory performance
A team of researchers at Saarland University headed by Professor Axel Mecklinger have shown that a short nap lasting about an hour can significantly improve memory performance. The study, which was coordinated ...
Having a purpose in life may improve health of aging brain
Having a strong sense that your life has meaning and direction may make you less likely to develop areas of brain damage caused by blockages in blood flow as you age. This research is reported in the American ...
America's aging population will require more neurosurgeons for increased brain bleeds
By 2030, chronic subdural hemorrhage (SDH) will be the most common adult brain condition requiring neurosurgical intervention in the U.S., according to a new study conducted by researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center. And ...
User comments
Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more
Click here to reset your password.
Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.
by Morgan Holmes
 
Medical physics professor Jahan Tavakkoli and St. Michael’s researchers are exploring a new method to study concussion and its treatment.
In recent years, many Canadians have become aware of traumatic brain injury (TBI) through the reporting of concussions suffered by hockey players and other athletes. In addition to widespread sports-related injuries, TBIs often occurs as the result of, among other events, automobile collisions, workplace accidents and explosions (military and civilian).
The result of an impact or jolt to the head, or of an injury that penetrates the skull, a TBI disrupts normal brain function. It can result in relatively mild symptoms, such as headaches, memory lapses and mood swings, and more severe effects, such as loss of the ability to speak, see or move certain limbs.
A major public health issue
Ryerson University medical physics professor Jahan Tavakkoli has spent the last few years using acoustic shock waves to expand understanding of the mechanisms involved in and the physiology of TBI, and to lay the groundwork for potential treatments.
"TBI is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries. It is associated," Tavakkoli notes, "with considerable direct and indirect healthcare costs, as well as quality-of-life reductions." Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back up these contentions: in 2010, more than 2.5 million TBIs occurred in the United States, and TBIs contribute to approximately 30 per cent of all injury deaths in that country.
Zebrafish model
Tavakkoli – a world expert in high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) and acoustic shock waves – is carrying out his TBI investigations in collaboration with Andrew Baker, the medical director of the Trauma and Neurosurgery program at St. Michael's Hospital (the men first met in 2012 during a networking event hosted by Ryerson and St. Michael's).
Together, they are developing a zebrafish model of TBI using the hospital's state-of-the-art zebrafish screening facility. Zebrafish, Baker explains, "are an emerging model organism for studies of disease and human brain development because of their high evolutionary homology to humans, rapid procreation rate, suitability for whole-animal in vivo imaging and genomic amenability to large-scale preclinical drug validation."
Tavakkoli and Baker also rely on several highly qualified personnel to assist with their endeavours: on the Ryerson side, Pooya Sobhe Bidari (PhD student) and Arthur Worthington (research engineer); at St. Michael's, Victoria McCutcheon (MSc student) and Eugene Park (research associate).
Methods and results
By applying targeted 1-MHz acoustic shock waves to adult zebrafish brain, Tavakkoli, Baker and their colleagues have been able to produce non-penetrating brain injuries and have learned that zebrafish respond to brain trauma in ways that are similar to mammals. This work has allowed the creation of a novel animal model and methodology to induce controlled brain injury. "We are now able to study concussion in a way that has never been done before," Baker explains. "Because we have characterized this model in detail, we can measure in detail the reaction to concussion; therefore, we can also see in detail the response to new treatments. The potential implications for helping people suffering from TBI and its adverse effects are huge."
In November 2014, Tavakkoli and Baker filed an invention disclosure (to the intellectual property offices at both Ryerson and St. Michael's) based on the novel aspects of the materials and methodology they have thus far developed.
 
  Explore further: Teens with a history of TBI are nearly four times more likely to have used crystal meth 
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Teens with a history of TBI are nearly four times more likely to have used crystal meth
Ontario students between Grades 9 and 12 who said they had a traumatic brain injury in their lifetime, also reported drug use rates two to four times higher than peers with no history of TBI, according to research published ...
Exploring the link between traumatic brain injury and people who are homeless
Homeless people and their health care providers need to know more about traumatic brain injuries to help prevent and treat such injuries, a new study has found.
One in six Ontario adults say they have had a traumatic brain injury in their lifetime
Nearly seventeen per cent of adults surveyed in Ontario said they have suffered a traumatic brain injury that left them unconscious for five minutes or required them to be hospitalized overnight, according to new research. ...
Study finds almost half of homeless men had traumatic brain injury in their life
Almost half of all homeless men who took part in a study by St. Michael's Hospital had suffered at least one traumatic brain injury in their life and 87 per cent of those injuries occurred before the men ...
Homeless with TBI more likely to visit ER
Homeless and vulnerably housed people who have suffered a traumatic brain injury at some point in their life are more likely to visit an Emergency Department, be arrested or incarcerated, or be victims of ...
Recommended for you
Copycat behaviour may assist stroke rehabilitation
Stroke survivors with impaired mobility in their arms appear to significantly improve in both motor function and confidence when they observe an individual performing a task and then mimic their actions.
Brain fitness for a long and healthy life
The strategies for living a long and healthy life are well known and relatively simple, if not always easily executed: Maintain an appropriate weight. Eat the right foods. Exercise. Limit stress.
Potential new drug target may protect against certain neurodegenerative diseases
Penn Medicine researchers have discovered that hypermethylation - the epigenetic ability to turn down or turn off a bad gene implicated in 10 to 30 percent of patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) ...
Power naps produce a significant improvement in memory performance
A team of researchers at Saarland University headed by Professor Axel Mecklinger have shown that a short nap lasting about an hour can significantly improve memory performance. The study, which was coordinated ...
Having a purpose in life may improve health of aging brain
Having a strong sense that your life has meaning and direction may make you less likely to develop areas of brain damage caused by blockages in blood flow as you age. This research is reported in the American ...
America's aging population will require more neurosurgeons for increased brain bleeds
By 2030, chronic subdural hemorrhage (SDH) will be the most common adult brain condition requiring neurosurgical intervention in the U.S., according to a new study conducted by researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center. And ...
User comments
Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more
Click here
to reset your password.
Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.
0 comments:
Post a Comment