Abstract

Spreading depolarizations (SDs) are characterized by near-complete breakdown of the transmembrane ion gradients, neuronal oedema and activity loss (=depression). The SD extreme in ischemic tissue, termed ‘terminal SD,’ shows prolonged depolarization, in addition to a slow baseline variation called ‘negative ultraslow potential’ (NUP). The NUP is the largest bioelectrical signal ever recorded from the human brain and is thought to reflect the progressive recruitment of neurons into death in the wake of SD. However, it is unclear whether the NUP is a field potential or results from contaminating sensitivities of platinum electrodes. In contrast to Ag/AgCl-based electrodes in animals, platinum/iridium electrodes are the gold standard for intracranial direct current (DC) recordings in humans. Here, we investigated the full continuum including short-lasting SDs under normoxia, long-lasting SDs under systemic hypoxia, and terminal SD under severe global ischemia using platinum/iridium electrodes in rats to better understand their recording characteristics. Sensitivities for detecting SDs or NUPs were 100% for both electrode types. Nonetheless, the platinum/iridium-recorded NUP was 10 times smaller in rats than humans. The SD continuum was then further investigated by comparing subdural platinum/iridium and epidural titanium peg electrodes in patients. In seven patients with either aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage or malignant hemispheric stroke, two epidural peg electrodes were placed 10 mm from a subdural strip. We found that 31/67 SDs (46%) on the subdural strip were also detected epidurally. SDs that had longer negative DC shifts and spread more widely across the subdural strip were more likely to be observed in epidural recordings. One patient displayed an SD-initiated NUP while undergoing brain death despite continued circulatory function. The NUP’s amplitude was -150 mV subdurally and -67 mV epidurally. This suggests that the human NUP is a bioelectrical field potential rather than an artifact of electrode sensitivity to other factors, since the dura separates the epidural from the subdural compartment and the epidural microenvironment was unlikely changed, given that ventilation, arterial pressure and peripheral oxygen saturation remained constant during the NUP. Our data provide further evidence for the clinical value of invasive electrocorticographic monitoring, highlighting important possibilities as well as limitations of less invasive recording techniques.

Highlights

  • Spreading depolarization is the principal mechanism causing cytotoxic oedema and excitotoxicity in cerebral cortex and basal ganglia (Ochs and Van Harreveld, 1956; van Harreveld, 1959; Dreier et al, 2013, 2018a; Hinzman et al, 2015)

  • The recordings using the silver/silver chloride (Ag/AgCl)-based intracortical glass-microelectrode and the Pt/Ir electrodes are compared in Figure 1B and Table 1

  • The animal experiments indicated that Pt/Ir electrodes on the brain surface can record 100% of spreading depolarization (SD), SD-induced spreading depressions, non-spreading depression and SD-initiated negative ultraslow potential (NUP), but negative direct current (DC) reverberations following the recovery from SD may complicate evaluation, especially evaluation of the NUP

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Summary

Introduction

Spreading depolarization is the principal mechanism causing cytotoxic oedema and excitotoxicity in cerebral cortex and basal ganglia (Ochs and Van Harreveld, 1956; van Harreveld, 1959; Dreier et al, 2013, 2018a; Hinzman et al, 2015). The SD continuum describes the spectrum from terminal SD in severely ischemic tissue to transient SDs with negative DC shifts of intermediate to short duration in tissue that is less ischemic or normal (Dreier and Reiffurth, 2015; Hartings et al, 2017b). SDs occur in human conditions ranging from CA, to stroke, to the harmless migraine aura (Dreier et al, 2006, 2018b; Dohmen et al, 2008; Lauritzen et al, 2011). This means that there are commonalities yet considerable variations in SD properties along the continuum. The NUP has been recorded in patients dying in the wake of CA (Dreier et al, 2018b), in a patient with aSAH undergoing brain death despite continued circulatory function (Carlson et al, 2018), and in patients with ECI and DCI after

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