Abstract

Chronic systemic inflammatory conditions, such as atherosclerosis, diabetes and obesity are associated with increased risk of stroke, which suggests that systemic inflammation may contribute to the development of stroke in humans. The hypothesis that systemic inflammation may induce brain pathology can be tested in animals, and this was the key objective of the present study. First, we assessed inflammatory changes in the brain in rodent models of chronic, systemic inflammation. PET imaging revealed increased microglia activation in the brain of JCR-LA (corpulent) rats, which develop atherosclerosis and obesity, compared to the control lean strain. Immunostaining against Iba1 confirmed reactive microgliosis in these animals. An atherogenic diet in apolipoprotein E knock-out (ApoE−/−) mice induced microglial activation in the brain parenchyma within 8weeks and increased expression of vascular adhesion molecules. Focal lipid deposition and neuroinflammation in periventricular and cortical areas and profound recruitment of activated myeloid phagocytes, T cells and granulocytes into the choroid plexus were also observed. In a small, preliminary study, patients at risk of stroke (multiple risk factors for stroke, with chronically elevated C-reactive protein, but negative MRI for brain pathology) exhibited increased inflammation in the brain, as indicated by PET imaging. These findings show that brain inflammation occurs in animals, and tentatively in humans, harbouring risk factors for stroke associated with elevated systemic inflammation. Thus a “primed” inflammatory environment in the brain may exist in individuals at risk of stroke and this can be adequately recapitulated in appropriate co-morbid animal models.

Highlights

  • Clinical and experimental evidence implicates inflammation in multiple phases of stroke aetiology and pathology

  • We show that brain inflammation is present in rats and mice harbouring systemic vascular and/or metabolic disease and that analogous changes may be present in patients with clinical risk factors and evidence of systemic inflammation, as indicated by a raised concentration of circulating C-reactive protein (CRP)

  • There was no significant difference in microglial activation as determined by PET imaging between lean and corpulent rats at 9 months of age (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical and experimental evidence implicates inflammation in multiple phases of stroke aetiology and pathology Several of the risk factors for stroke, such as atherosclerosis, hypertension and diabetes/obesity are triggered and/or propagated by dysregulated systemic inflammatory processes (Dandona et al, 2004; Ross, 1999; Savoia and Schiffrin, 2006). Markers of elevated systemic inflammation are associated with increased stroke risk and brain lesions detected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (Fornage et al, 2008; van Dijk et al, 2005). It reduces cerebrovascular events in patients without hyperlipidemia but with raised C-reactive protein (CRP) levels

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