Abstract

The purpose of this review is to describe the relationship between the dopamine and amino acid neurotransmitter systems and cortical oxygen pressure during different levels of cerebral hypoxia using newborn piglets as an animal model, adding new data from our laboratory. The extracellular dopamine increases as the oxygen pressure in the cortex decreases. The relationship between oxygen pressure and dopamine levels is the same whether the hypoxia is induced by reduced FiO2 (high-flow hypoxia) or by hypocapnia-induced cerebral vasoconstriction (low-flow hypoxia). Thus it appears that, particularly in mild hypoxia, the extracellular level of dopamine depends primarily on the oxygen concentration in the tissue with minimal influence of parameters such as blood flow and pH. There is no "oxygen reserve" in the brain of newborn piglets and the extracellular levels of dopamine in the striatum increase almost linearly with decrease in oxygen pressure, with even small decreases in oxygen pressure resulting in increased dopamine levels. In contrast, the changes in extracellular concentrations of the excitatory amino acids glutamate and aspartate are variable and transient. In a majority of 2- to 5-day-old piglets even very low oxygen pressures in the brain did not result in significant alterations in the extracellular levels of glutamate and aspartate. These changes in the dopaminergic system may contribute directly and indirectly to the neuronal damage that occurs during hypoxic/ischemic insult and reoxygenation in newborn brain, particularly in the striatum. A variety of mechanisms are discussed by which dopamine, in particular extracellular dopamine, can increase cellular toxicity.

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