Lipid Biomarker Alterations Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Author(s)
Gier, Eric C.
Editor(s)
Associated Organization(s)
Organizational Unit
Series
Supplementary to:
Abstract
The work presented in this thesis highlights the current state of biomarker research for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and seeks to investigate the potential of novel lipid biomarkers for TBI. Awareness and research interest surrounding TBI have been heightened in recent years due to increased media coverage and epidemics within the military, athletic organizations, accident victims, the elderly, and the general population. The heterogeneous nature of TBI makes diagnosis and biomarker discovery particularly challenging as severities and exposure events vary widely. The first two chapters serve to outline the current state of TBI regarding its impact on human life, methods of diagnosis, injury mechanisms, and current research in the field. These chapters ultimately highlight a current gap between modern research and clinical implementation that is being closed rapidly through omics research. The final two chapters describe the research conducted over the past year to identify potential lipid biomarkers of TBI. Two predictive lipid panels were developed to classify injured and uninjured Sprague-Dawley rat serum across two injury severities and three acute postinjury timepoints. Identified lipid features from the proposed panels consist primarily of phosphatidylcholine and triacylglyceride species which warrant future investigation as proposed biomarkers of TBI. Ultimately, future work is needed to validate the features identified as potential biomarker candidates and to connect the lipid responses discovered in serum to alterations in the brain lipid profile to gain a more holistic picture of TBI.
Sponsor
Date
2021-01-22
Extent
Resource Type
Text
Resource Subtype
Thesis
Rights Statement
Rights URI