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"Omics" in Traumatic Brain Injury: Novel Approaches to a Complex Disease

Overview
Specialty Neurosurgery
Date 2021 Jul 17
PMID 34273044
Citations 5
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Abstract

Background: To date, there is neither any pharmacological treatment with efficacy in traumatic brain injury (TBI) nor any method to halt the disease progress. This is due to an incomplete understanding of the vast complexity of the biological cascades and failure to appreciate the diversity of secondary injury mechanisms in TBI. In recent years, techniques for high-throughput characterization and quantification of biological molecules that include genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics have evolved and referred to as omics.

Methods: In this narrative review, we highlight how omics technology can be applied to potentiate diagnostics and prognostication as well as to advance our understanding of injury mechanisms in TBI.

Results: The omics platforms provide possibilities to study function, dynamics, and alterations of molecular pathways of normal and TBI disease states. Through advanced bioinformatics, large datasets of molecular information from small biological samples can be analyzed in detail and provide valuable knowledge of pathophysiological mechanisms, to include in prognostic modeling when connected to clinically relevant data. In such a complex disease as TBI, omics enables broad categories of studies from gene compositions associated with susceptibility to secondary injury or poor outcome, to potential alterations in metabolites following TBI.

Conclusion: The field of omics in TBI research is rapidly evolving. The recent data and novel methods reviewed herein may form the basis for improved precision medicine approaches, development of pharmacological approaches, and individualization of therapeutic efforts by implementing mathematical "big data" predictive modeling in the near future.

Citing Articles

Neuroinflammation and acquired traumatic CNS injury: a mini review.

Theus M Front Neurol. 2024; 15:1334847.

PMID: 38450073 PMC: 10915049. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1334847.


Polypathologies and Animal Models of Traumatic Brain Injury.

Freeman-Jones E, Miller W, Work L, Fullerton J Brain Sci. 2023; 13(12).

PMID: 38137157 PMC: 10741988. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci13121709.


Management and Treatment of Traumatic Brain Injuries.

Jha S, Ghewade P Cureus. 2022; 14(10):e30617.

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Tandem Mass Tag-based proteomics analysis reveals the vital role of inflammation in traumatic brain injury in a mouse model.

Dong J, Ge Q, Lu S, Yang M, Zhuang Y, Zhang B Neural Regen Res. 2022; 18(1):155-161.

PMID: 35799536 PMC: 9241417. DOI: 10.4103/.


Progress Toward a Multiomic Understanding of Traumatic Brain Injury: A Review.

Kocheril P, Moore S, Lenz K, Mukundan H, Lilley L Biomark Insights. 2022; 17:11772719221105145.

PMID: 35719705 PMC: 9201320. DOI: 10.1177/11772719221105145.

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