Intestinal barrier breakdown following traumatic brain injury (TBI) is characterized by increased intestinal permeability, leading to bacterial translocation, and inflammation. The hormone ghrelin may prevent intestinal injury and have anti-inflammatory properties. We hypothesized that exogenous ghrelin prevents intestinal injury following TBI. A weight-drop model created severe TBI in three groups of anesthetized Balb/c mice. Group TBI: animals underwent TBI only; Group TBI/ghrelin: animals were given 10āμg of ghrelin intraperitoneally prior and 1āh following TBI; Group sham: no TBI or ghrelin injection. Intestinal permeability was measured 6āh following TBI by detecting serum levels of FITC-Dextran after injection into the intact ileum. The terminal ileum was harvested for histology, expression of the tight junction protein MLCK and inflammatory cytokine TNF-α. Permeability increased in the TBI group compared to the sham group (109.7ā±ā21.8āμg/mL vs. 32.2ā±ā10.1āμg/mL; pā<ā0.002). Ghrelin prevented TBI-induced permeability (28.3ā±ā4.2āμg/mL vs. 109.7ā±ā21.8āμg/mL; pā<ā0.001). The intestines of the TBI group showed blunting and necrosis of villi compared to the sham group, while ghrelin injection preserved intestinal architecture. Intestinal MLCK increased 73% compared to the sham group (pā<ā0.03). Ghrelin prevented TBI-induced MLCK expression to sham levels. Intestinal TNF-α increased following TBI compared to the sham group (46.2ā±ā7.1āpg/mL vs. 24.4ā±ā2.2āpg/mL pā<ā0.001). Ghrelin reduced TNF-α to sham levels (29.2ā±ā5.0āpg/mL; pā=āNS). We therefore conclude that ghrelin prevents TBI-induced injury, as determined by intestinal permeability, histology, and intestinal levels of TNF-α. The mechanism for ghrelin mediating intestinal protection is likely multifactorial, and further studies are needed to delineate these possibilities.