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Dive into the research topics where Mieszko Olczak is active.

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Featured researches published by Mieszko Olczak.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Persistent behavioral impairments and alterations of brain dopamine system after early postnatal administration of thimerosal in rats

Mieszko Olczak; Michalina Duszczyk; Paweł Mierzejewski; Ksenia Meyza; Maria Dorota Majewska

The neurotoxic organomercurial thimerosal (THIM), used for decades as vaccine preservative, is a suspected factor in the pathogenesis of some neurodevelopmental disorders. Previously we showed that neonatal administration of THIM at doses equivalent to those used in infant vaccines or higher, causes lasting alterations in the brain opioid system in rats. Here we investigated neonatal treatment with THIM (at doses 12, 240, 1440 and 3000 μg Hg/kg) on behaviors, which are characteristically altered in autism, such as locomotor activity, anxiety, social interactions, spatial learning, and on the brain dopaminergic system in Wistar rats of both sexes. Adult male and female rats, which were exposed to the entire range of THIM doses during the early postnatal life, manifested impairments of locomotor activity and increased anxiety/neophobia in the open field test. In animals of both sexes treated with the highest THIM dose, the frequency of prosocial interactions was reduced, while the frequency of asocial/antisocial interactions was increased in males, but decreased in females. Neonatal THIM treatment did not significantly affect spatial learning and memory. THIM-exposed rats also manifested reduced haloperidol-induced catalepsy, accompanied by a marked decline in the density of striatal D₂ receptors, measured by immunohistochemical staining, suggesting alterations to the brain dopaminergic system. Males were more sensitive than females to some neurodisruptive/neurotoxic actions of THIM. These data document that early postnatal THIM administration causes lasting neurobehavioral impairments and neurochemical alterations in the brain, dependent on dose and sex. If similar changes occur in THIM/mercurial-exposed children, they could contribute do neurodevelopmental disorders.


Brain Research | 2009

Neonatal administration of a vaccine preservative, thimerosal, produces lasting impairment of nociception and apparent activation of opioid system in rats.

Mieszko Olczak; Michalina Duszczyk; Paweł Mierzejewski; Maria Dorota Majewska

Thimerosal (THIM), an organomercury preservative added to many child vaccines is a suspected factor in pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders. We examined the pharmacokinetics of Hg in the brain, liver and kidneys after i.m. THIM injection in suckling rats and we tested THIM effect on nociception. THIM solutions were injected to Wistar and Lewis rats in a vaccination-like mode on PN days 7, 9, 11 and 15 in four equal doses. For Wistar rats these were: 12, 48, 240, 720, 1440, 2160, 3000 microg Hg/kg and for Lewis: 54, 216, 540 and 1080 microg Hg/kg. Pharmacokinetic analysis revealed that Hg from THIM injections accumulates in the rat brain in significant amounts and remains there longer than 30 days after the injection. At the 6th week of age animals were examined for pain sensitivity using the hot plate test. THIM treated rats of both strains and sexes manifested statistically significantly elevated pain threshold (latency for paw licking, jumping) on a hot plate (56 degrees C). Wistar rats were more sensitive to this effect than Lewis rats. Protracted THIM-induced hypoalgesia was reversed by naloxone (5 mg/kg, i.p.) injected before the hot plate test, indicative of involvement of endogenous opioids. This was confirmed by augmented catalepsy after morphine (2.5 mg/kg, s.c.) injection. Acute THIM injection to 6-week-old rats also produced hypoalgesia, but this effect was transient and was gone within 14 days. Present findings show that THIM administration to suckling or adult rats impairs sensitivity to pain, apparently due to activation the endogenous opioid system.


Physiology & Behavior | 2009

The effects of buspirone and diazepam on aversive context- and social isolation-induced ultrasonic vocalisation

Adam Hamed; Tomasz Jaroszewski; Piotr Maciejak; Janusz Szyndler; Małgorzata Lehner; Ita Kamecka; Mieszko Olczak; Urszula Kuzinska; Ewa Taracha; Adam Płaźnik

Rats emit two types of high-frequency vocalisations (aversive and appetitive calls) in different behavioural situations. The aims of this paper were to examine an animal model of appetitive behaviour (as an element of social interaction) and to study the effects of selected psychotropic drugs on appetitively evoked ultrasonic vocalisation (USVs) and aversive context-evoked USVs. Specifically, we analysed the impact of the encounter of pairs of adult rats after long-term isolation on ultrasound vocalisation. It was found that isolation of the adult rats significantly enhanced the appetitive ultrasound vocalisations (50-kHz) during encounters between pairs of rats. In the pharmacological part of the study, we found that diazepam (1.0 mg kg(-1)) significantly increased isolation-induced appetitive USVs (50 kHz) and decreased aversive context-evoked USVs (22-kHz). Buspiron (3.0 mg kg(-1)) decreased the aversive context-evoked USVs and had no effect on isolation-induced appetitive USVs. These data indicate that long-term, isolation-induced 50-kHz USVs in adult rats represent a new behavioural parameter under control of the central GABAergic system, which can be used to study the effects of anxiolytic drugs.


Neuroscience Letters | 2008

Effects of cycloheximide on extinction in an appetitively motivated operant conditioning task depend on re-exposure duration.

Paweł Mierzejewski; Mieszko Olczak; Artur Rogowski; Wojciech Kostowski; Jerzy Samochowiec; Małgorzata Filip; Edmund Przegaliński; Przemyslaw Bienkowski

Little is known about the role of new protein synthesis in extinction of operant responding for natural and chemical reinforcers. In the present study, the authors investigated whether the effects of a protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide (CHX) on extinction of operant responding for sweet reward depended on the duration of re-exposure sessions. In addition, the authors investigated whether the effects of CHX on extinction could generalize to relapse of saccharin seeking induced by discrete cues. CHX injected after short re-exposure sessions (5min) accelerated extinction of non-reinforced responding. In contrast, the drug injected after long re-exposure sessions (30min) partially inhibited extinction. Reinstatement of saccharin seeking induced by the saccharin-paired discrete cues was not altered by the previous treatment with CHX. Concluding, the results of the present study indicate that: (i) the protein synthesis inhibitor, CHX can alter extinction of operant responding for sweet reward in rats; (ii) the effects of CHX on extinction critically depend on the duration of re-exposure/extinction sessions and do not generalize to relapse of saccharin seeking induced by discrete cues.


Forensic Science International | 2017

Tau protein (MAPT) as a possible biochemical marker of traumatic brain injury in postmortem examination

Mieszko Olczak; Justyna Niderla-Bielińska; Magdalena Kwiatkowska; Dorota Samojłowicz; Sylwia Tarka; Teresa Wierzba-Bobrowicz

MAPT is a neuronal protein that plays an important role in axonal stabilization, neuronal development, and neuronal polarity. MAPT release into the CSF and blood has been interpreted as indicative of axonal injury as its elevated levels were observed in olympic boxers even after a mild head trauma suggesting minor CNS injuries. In our study we wanted to check the potential relevance of MAPT examination for forensic purposes. The study was carried out using cases of head injury group and cases of sudden death (cardiopulmonary failure, no injuries of the head - control group) provided by forensic pathologists at the Department of Forensic Medicine, Medical University of Warsaw. CSF and blood were collected within 24h after death using suboccipital puncture and femoral vein puncture. Serum and cerebrospinal fluid Tau protein concentrations were compared using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). Brain specimens (frontal cortex) were collected during forensic autopsies. Sections were stained histologically (hematoxylin-eosin) and immunohistochemically with anti human Tau antibody, anti glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP), anti human macrosialin (CD68) or anti human endothelial cells (CD34). In our study we documented that elevated levels of serum and CSF MAPT may also be considered a marker for mild traumatic brain injury and traumatic brain injury (mTBI and TBI). An increase in CSF and serum levels of MAPT in the absence of visible macroscopic traumatic CNS changes indicates that even minor head injuries may result in changes at the neuronal level that could remain undiagnosed during regular forensic autopsy and routine histopathological examination.


Legal Medicine | 2015

A case of child death caused by intestinal volvulus following magnetic toy ingestion

Mieszko Olczak; Ewa Skrzypek

An 8-year boy was admitted to the ER of one of Warsaws pediatric hospitals with a history of having bloody vomiting the day before. During admission the boy collapsed and lost consciousness. CPR was unsuccessful. On medico-legal autopsy, two foreign objects (small magnetic spheres--0.5 cm in diameter) were found in two different places in the small and large intestines and were notably attracted magnetically one to another. A loop of approximately 1-m length with features of small intestinal hemorrhagic necrosis and small intestinal mechanical obstruction was found. The cause of death was intestinal volvulus and small intestinal mechanical obstruction caused by ingestion of foreign objects (two neodymium magnets). Most likely these small magnetic spheres were part of a popular toy, the safety of which, lately, has been widely discussed.


Forensic Science Medicine and Pathology | 2018

Bystin (BYSL) as a possible marker of severe hypoxic-ischemic changes in neuropathological examination of forensic cases

Mieszko Olczak; Dominik Chutorański; Magdalena Kwiatkowska; Dorota Samojłowicz; Sylwia Tarka; Teresa Wierzba-Bobrowicz

Bystin (BYSL) is a 306-amino acid protein encoded in humans by the BYSL gene located on the 6p21.1 chromosome. It is conserved across a wide range of eukaryotes. BYSL was reported to be a sensitive marker for the reactive astrocytes induced by ischemia/reperfusion and chemical hypoxia in vitro and is considered to be one of the common characteristics of astrogliosis. In our study we examined whether BYSL could be used as a marker for hypoxic-ischemic changes in forensic cases. Groups suspected of acute hypoxic-ischemic changes presented strong BYSL expression in the cytoplasm of neocortical neurons especially in layers 3–5, that seemed to be short-lasting. In the hypoxic-ischemic-reperfusion group we did not find BYSL expression. BYSL expression in the cytoplasm of cortical neurons was minimal in the control group (cardiac arrest). BYSL seems to be a promising early marker of severe hypoxic-ischemic changes in neuropathological examination of forensic cases and certainly requires further studies.


Archives of Forensic Medicine and Criminology | 2016

Brachiocephalic trunk damage resulted from percutaneous tracheotomy

Magdalena Kwiatkowska; Małgorzata Brzozowska; Mieszko Olczak; Sylwia Tarka

The paper presents a rare case of injury to the brachiocephalic trunk wall during percutaneous tracheotomy. The complication developed in a post-cardiac arrest patient in a poor general condition. During hospitalization in the Intensive Care Unit, the patient suffered a haemorrhage directly from and around the endotracheal tube. After another episode of massive bleeding the patient died. The autopsy found that the source of the bleeding was injury to the brachiocephalic trunk.


Neurochemical Research | 2012

Administration of Thimerosal to Infant Rats Increases Overflow of Glutamate and Aspartate in the Prefrontal Cortex: Protective Role of Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate

Michalina Duszczyk-Budhathoki; Mieszko Olczak; Małgorzata Lehner; Maria Dorota Majewska


Folia Neuropathologica | 2010

Lasting neuropathological changes in rat brain after intermittent neonatal administration of thimerosal.

Mieszko Olczak; Michalina Duszczyk; Paweł Mierzejewski; Teresa Wierzba-Bobrowicz; Majewska

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Paweł Mierzejewski

Medical University of Warsaw

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Maria Dorota Majewska

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Sylwia Tarka

Medical University of Warsaw

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Dorota Samojłowicz

Medical University of Warsaw

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Adam Hamed

Medical University of Warsaw

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Adam Płaźnik

Medical University of Warsaw

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Ewa Skrzypek

Medical University of Warsaw

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