Abstract

High intracranial pressure (ICP) can impede cerebral blood flow resulting in secondary injury or death following severe stroke. Compensatory mechanisms include reduced cerebral blood and cerebrospinal fluid volumes, but these often fail to prevent raised ICP. Serendipitous observations in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) suggest that neurons far removed from a hematoma may shrink as an ICP compliance mechanism. Here, we sought to critically test this observation. We tracked the timing of distal tissue shrinkage (e.g. CA1) after collagenase-induced striatal ICH in rat; cell volume and density alterations (42% volume reduction, 34% density increase; p < 0.0001) were highest day one post-stroke, and rebounded over a week across brain regions. Similar effects were seen in the filament model of middle cerebral artery occlusion (22% volume reduction, 22% density increase; p ≤ 0.007), but not with the Vannucci-Rice model of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (2.5% volume increase, 14% density increase; p ≥ 0.05). Concerningly, this ‘tissue compliance’ appears to cause sub-lethal damage, as revealed by electron microscopy after ICH. Our data challenge the long-held assumption that ‘healthy’ brain tissue outside the injured area maintains its volume. Given the magnitude of these effects, we posit that ‘tissue compliance’ is an important mechanism invoked after severe strokes.

Highlights

  • Since the inception of the Monro-Kellie doctrine, it has often been assumed that brain tissue itself plays a static role in the intracranial pressure (ICP) compliance response, while cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood act as the dynamic components, redirecting in attempt to maintain ICP homeostasis

  • Clear in vitro evidence shows that neurons possess regulatory mechanisms to adjust cell volume in response to stressors such as high environmental p­ ressure[11,13,30,31]; so it seems unreasonable to assume that brain tissue has no role in compliance

  • Strict a priori exclusion criterion, and precise quantitative stereological assessment methods, we demonstrate that large ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes in adult rodents causes widespread tissue and cell shrinkage in areas well outside the injury

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to have at least 80% power to detect a 25% difference in neuron soma volume and density, based on our past tissue response work in multiple ICH m­ odels

Methods
Results
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