Blast traumatic brain injury-induced cognitive deficits are attenuated by preinjury or postinjury treatment with the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, exendin-4.
Alzheimers Dement · 2016
Last updated 2026-05-28In a mouse study, the GLP-1 drug exendin-4 (Ex-4) was tested as a treatment for blast traumatic brain injury (B-TBI). When given either 48 hours before or 2 hours after injury, Ex-4 reduced brain cell damage at 72 hours, improved memory problems from days 7 to 14, and lessened changes in genes linked to dementia at day 14.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Alzheimers Dement, 2016 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 51 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.32 |
| NIH percentile | 78 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Blast traumatic brain injury (B-TBI) affects military and civilian personnel. Presently, there are no approved drugs for blast brain injury.
METHODS: Exendin-4 (Ex-4), administered subcutaneously, was evaluated as a pretreatment (48 hours) and postinjury treatment (2 hours) on neurodegeneration, behaviors, and gene expressions in a murine open field model of blast injury.
RESULTS: B-TBI induced neurodegeneration, changes in cognition, and genes expressions linked to dementia disorders. Ex-4, administered preinjury or postinjury, ameliorated B-TBI-induced neurodegeneration at 72 hours, memory deficits from days 7-14, and attenuated genes regulated by blast at day 14 postinjury.
DISCUSSION: The present data suggest shared pathologic processes between concussive and B-TBI, with end points amenable to beneficial therapeutic manipulation by Ex-4. B-TBI-induced dementia-related gene pathways and cognitive deficits in mice somewhat parallel epidemiologic studies of Barnes et al. who identified a greater risk in US military veterans who experienced diverse TBIs, for dementia in later life.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26327236 ↗