Abstract
Ischemic stroke is a devastating complication of bone fracture. Bone fracture shortly after stroke enhances stroke injury by augmenting inflammation. We hypothesize that bone fracture shortly before ischemic stroke also exacerbates ischemic cerebral injury. Tibia fracture was performed 6 or 24 hours before permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (pMCAO) on C57BL/6J mice or Ccr2RFP/+Cx3cr1GFP/+ mice that have the RFP gene knocked into one allele of Ccr2 gene and GFP gene knocked into one allele of Cx3cr1 gene. Behavior was tested 3 days after pMCAO. Infarct volume, the number of CD68+ cells, apoptotic neurons, bone marrow-derived macrophages (RFP+), and microgila (GFP+) in the peri-infarct region were quantified. Compared to mice subjected to pMCAO only, bone fracture 6 or 24 hours before pMCAO increased behavioral deficits, the infarct volume, and the number of CD68+ cells and apoptotic neurons in the peri-infarct area. Both bone marrow-derived macrophages (CCR2+) and microglia (CX3CR1+) increased in the peri-infarct regions of mice subjected to bone fracture before pMCAO compared to stroke-only mice. The mice subjected to bone fracture 6 hours before pMCAO had more severe injury than mice that had bone fracture 24 hours before pMCAO. Our data showed that bone fracture shortly before stroke also increases neuroinflammation and exacerbates ischemic cerebral injury. Our findings suggest that inhibition of neuroinflammation or management of stroke risk factors before major bone surgery would be beneficial for patients who are likely to suffer from stroke.
Highlights
Bone fracture is a common health problem that can cause long-term disability
We found in our previous study that bone fracture one day after ischemic stroke exacerbates brain injury [9,12]
To determine if bone fracture before stroke has any influence on ischemic brain injury, we performed tibia fracture on mice 6 or 24 hours before permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (pMCAO) and analyzed infarct volume and neuron apoptosis
Summary
Bone fracture is a common health problem that can cause long-term disability. After adjusting for competing risk of death, the residual lifetime risk of fracture for women and men from age 60 is 44% and 25%, respectively [1]. Stroke and bone fracture share some common risk factors, such as hypertension and diabetes mellitus [2,3]. Stroke is one of the most devastating complications for bone fracture patients. The incidence of stroke after bone fracture. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0153835 April 18, 2016
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