Abstract

BackgroundIn ischemic stroke, cerebral autoregulation and neurovascular coupling may become impaired. The cerebral blood flow (CBF) response to spreading depolarization (SD) is governed by neurovascular coupling. SDs recur in the ischemic penumbra and reduce neuronal viability by the insufficiency of the CBF response. Autoregulatory failure and SD may coexist in acute brain injury. Here, we set out to explore the interplay between the impairment of cerebrovascular autoregulation, SD occurrence, and the evolution of the SD-coupled CBF response.MethodsIncomplete global forebrain ischemia was created by bilateral common carotid artery occlusion in isoflurane-anesthetized rats, which induced ischemic SD (iSD). A subsequent SD was initiated 20–40 min later by transient anoxia SD (aSD), achieved by the withdrawal of oxygen from the anesthetic gas mixture for 4–5 min. SD occurrence was confirmed by the recording of direct current potential together with extracellular K+ concentration by intracortical microelectrodes. Changes in local CBF were acquired with laser Doppler flowmetry. Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) was continuously measured via a catheter inserted into the left femoral artery. CBF and MABP were used to calculate an index of cerebrovascular autoregulation (rCBFx). In a representative imaging experiment, variation in transmembrane potential was visualized with a voltage-sensitive dye in the exposed parietal cortex, and CBF maps were generated with laser speckle contrast analysis.ResultsIschemia induction and anoxia onset gave rise to iSD and aSD, respectively, albeit aSD occurred at a longer latency, and was superimposed on a gradual elevation of K+ concentration. iSD and aSD were accompanied by a transient drop of CBF (down to 11.9 ± 2.9 and 7.4 ± 3.6%, iSD and aSD), but distinctive features set the hypoperfusion transients apart. During iSD, rCBFx indicated intact autoregulation (rCBFx < 0.3). In contrast, aSD was superimposed on autoregulatory failure (rCBFx > 0.3) because CBF followed the decreasing MABP. CBF dropped 15–20 s after iSD, but the onset of hypoperfusion preceded aSD by almost 3 min. Taken together, the CBF response to iSD displayed typical features of spreading ischemia, whereas the transient CBF reduction with aSD appeared to be a passive decrease of CBF following the anoxia-related hypotension, leading to aSD.ConclusionsWe propose that the dysfunction of cerebrovascular autoregulation that occurs simultaneously with hypotension transients poses a substantial risk of SD occurrence and is not a consequence of SD. Under such circumstances, the evolving SD is not accompanied by any recognizable CBF response, which indicates a severely damaged neurovascular coupling.

Highlights

  • Optimal neuronal function is critically dependent on blood supply matching metabolic requirements

  • Cerebral autoregulation ensures that the blood supply to the brain is constant despite changes in perfusion pressure, whereas neurovascular coupling adapts local cerebral blood flow (CBF) to metabolic needs generated by neuronal activity

  • The restricted CBF response to somatosensory stimulation may be linked to suppressed neuronal activity under ischemia, but the reduction of the CBF response appears to be disproportionally greater than the attenuation of neuronal activity as the severity of ischemia deepens [5]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Optimal neuronal function is critically dependent on blood supply matching metabolic requirements. Cerebral autoregulation ensures that the blood supply to the brain is constant despite changes in perfusion pressure, whereas neurovascular coupling adapts local cerebral blood flow (CBF) to metabolic needs generated by neuronal activity. Cerebral autoregulation and neurovascular coupling may become impaired, effecting the dysregulation of CBF, thereby aggravating the ongoing perfusion deficit instigated by the initial vascular obstruction. Along with impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation, the efficacy of neurovascular coupling to passive sensory motor stimulation was reported to decline with the increasing severity of ischemic stroke and correlated with poor clinical outcome [4]. The CBF response to iSD displayed typical features of spreading ischemia, whereas the transient CBF reduction with aSD appeared to be a passive decrease of CBF following the anoxia-related hypotension, leading to aSD.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call