Abstract

Experimental intracerebral hemorrhage has been shown to cause extensive cerebral ischemia. This study was performed to ascertain the time course of these changes and also to examine the type of brain damage that may occur under such circumstances. Halothane anesthesia was induced in rats, and 25 microliter autologous blood was injected into the caudate nucleus; the effects were studied with autoradiographic measurement of local cerebral blood flow and capillary permeability, and also by light microscopy and histochemical techniques. Blood flow returned to normal or to slightly increased levels within the first 3 hours, and ischemic levels of flow were found to persist only to a marginal degree beyond 10 minutes after the lesions were made. Capillary permeability was maximum during the first 30 minutes after the hemorrhage and diminished with time. Structural evidence of ischemic damage was localized to the cortex overlying the hemorrhage, but was not seen in the caudate nucleus. Nevertheless, histochemical investigation did reveal an area of disturbed enzyme function in the striatum. This finding of biochemical disturbance without structural evidence of ischemic damage reveals that there is an area around the hematoma that, although demonstrating disturbed function, does not show structural damage, and the milieu of this partially injured brain may be implicated in the delayed development of the ischemic brain damage that follows intracerebral hemorrhage in man.

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