1. In Vivo Imaging of Glial Activation after Unilateral Labyrinthectomy in the Rat: A [18F]GE180-PET Study
- Author
-
Andreas Zwergal, Lisa Günther, Matthias Brendel, Roswitha Beck, Simon Lindner, Guoming Xiong, Eva Eilles, Marcus Unterrainer, Nathalie Lisa Albert, Sandra Becker-Bense, Thomas Brandt, Sibylle Ziegler, Christian la Fougère, Marianne Dieterich, and Peter Bartenstein
- Subjects
glial activation ,vestibular compensation ,small animal PET ,translocator protein imaging ,acute unilateral vestibulopathy ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
The functional relevance of reactive gliosis for recovery from acute unilateral vestibulopathy is unknown. In the present study, glial activation was visualized in vivo by [18F]GE180-PET in a rat model of unilateral labyrinthectomy (UL) and compared to behavioral vestibular compensation (VC) overtime. 14 Sprague-Dawley rats underwent a UL by transtympanic injection of bupivacaine/arsenilate, 14 rats a SHAM UL (injection of normal saline). Glial activation was depicted with [18F]GE180-PET and ex vivo autoradiography at baseline and 7, 15, 30 days after UL/SHAM UL. Postural asymmetry and nystagmus were registered at 1, 2, 3, 7, 15, 30 days after UL/SHAM UL. Signs of vestibular imbalance were found only after UL, which significantly decreased until days 15 and 30. In parallel, [18F]GE180-PET and ex vivo autoradiography depicted glial activation in the ipsilesional vestibular nerve and nucleus on days 7 and 15 after UL. Correlation analysis revealed a strong negative association of [18F]GE180 uptake in the ipsilesional vestibular nucleus on day 7 with the rate of postural recovery (R = −0.90, p
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF