Abstract

Postoperative neurocognitive disorder (PND) is a major complication in surgical patients, especially the elderly, leading to mild memory impairment after surgery. The underlying pathophysiology remains unknown, although neuroinflammation and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption have been increasingly implicated in PND. Emerging evidence suggests that neurokinin-1 receptor (NK-1R), the principal target of proinflammatory neuropeptide substance P (SP), plays a pivotal role in modulating neuroinflammation and BBB integrity. In this study, we used an established mouse model for PND to investigate the effects of a selective NK-1R antagonist L-733,060 on PND-like features after peripheral surgery. Hippocampal SP started to increase at 6 h, peaked at 1 day, and returned to baseline at 3 days after surgery. At 1 day after surgery, NK-1R expression was increased in the hippocampus. At this time point, NK-1R antagonist pretreatment attenuated microgliosis and prevented neutrophil infiltration after surgery. Similarly, proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1 beta and interleukin-6 were reduced in the hippocampus in NK-1R antagonist-treated mice at 6 h after surgery. Furthermore, surgery-induced BBB disruption, assessed by albumin deposition and expression of tight junction protein claudin-5, was attenuated by NK-1R antagonism at postoperative day 1. Finally, trace fear conditioning test revealed NK-1R antagonism reversed surgery-induced cognitive impairment at 3 days after surgery. Our findings suggest that inhibition of NK-1R signaling protects hippocampus-dependent memory from surgical insult, probably through modulations of neuroinflammation and BBB integrity.

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