Kudo M, Aono M, Lee Y, Massey G, Pearlstein R D, Warner D S
Department of Anesthesiology and Surgery, Multidisciplinary Neuroprotection Research Laboratories, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2001 Feb;94(2):303-212. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200102000-00021.
Volatile anesthetics decrease ischemic brain injury. Mechanisms for this protection remain under investigation. The authors hypothesized that volatile anesthetics serve as antioxidants in a neuronal-glial cell culture system.
Primary cortical neuronal-glial cultures were prepared from fetal rat brain. Cultures were exposed to iron, H2O2, or xanthine-xanthine oxidase for 30 min in serum-free media containing dissolved isoflurane (0-3.2 mm), sevoflurane (0-3.6 mm), halothane (0-4.1 mm), n-hexanol, or known antioxidants. Cell damage was assessed by release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and trypan blue exclusion 24 h later. Lipid peroxidation was measured by the production of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances in a cell-free lipid system. Iron and calcium uptake and mitochondrial depolarization were measured after exposure to iron in the presence or absence of isoflurane.
Deferoxamine reduced LDH release caused by H2O2 or xanthine-xanthine oxidase, but the volatile anesthetics had no effect. Iron-induced LDH release was prevented by the volatile anesthetics (maximum effect for halothane = 1.2 mm, isoflurane = 1.2 mm, and sevoflurane = 2.1 mm aqueous phase). When corrected for lipid solubility, the three volatile anesthetics were equipotent against iron-induced LDH release. In the cell-free system, there was no effect of the anesthetics on thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance formation in contrast to Trolox, which provided complete inhibition. Isoflurane (1.2 mm) reduced mean iron uptake by 46% and inhibited mitochondrial depolarization but had no effect on calcium uptake.
Volatile anesthetics reduced cell death induced by oxidative stress only in the context of iron challenge. The likely reason for protection against iron toxicity is inhibition of iron uptake and therefore indirect reduction of subsequent intracellular oxidative stress caused by this challenge. These data argue against a primary antioxidant effect of volatile anesthetics.
挥发性麻醉剂可减轻缺血性脑损伤。这种保护作用的机制仍在研究中。作者推测挥发性麻醉剂在神经元-神经胶质细胞培养系统中可作为抗氧化剂。
从胎鼠脑制备原代皮质神经元-神经胶质细胞培养物。将培养物在含有溶解异氟烷(0 - 3.2 mmol/L)、七氟烷(0 - 3.6 mmol/L)、氟烷(0 - 4.1 mmol/L)、正己醇或已知抗氧化剂的无血清培养基中暴露于铁、过氧化氢或黄嘌呤-黄嘌呤氧化酶30分钟。24小时后通过乳酸脱氢酶(LDH)释放和台盼蓝排斥试验评估细胞损伤。在无细胞脂质系统中通过硫代巴比妥酸反应性物质的产生来测量脂质过氧化。在有或没有异氟烷存在的情况下,暴露于铁后测量铁和钙摄取以及线粒体去极化。
去铁胺可减少由过氧化氢或黄嘌呤-黄嘌呤氧化酶引起的LDH释放,但挥发性麻醉剂无此作用。挥发性麻醉剂可预防铁诱导的LDH释放(氟烷的最大作用浓度 = 1.2 mmol/L水相,异氟烷 = 1.2 mmol/L水相,七氟烷 = 2.1 mmol/L水相)。校正脂质溶解度后,三种挥发性麻醉剂对铁诱导的LDH释放具有同等效力。在无细胞系统中,与完全抑制的托可索仑相比,麻醉剂对硫代巴比妥酸反应性物质的形成无影响。异氟烷(1.2 mmol/L)使平均铁摄取减少46%并抑制线粒体去极化,但对钙摄取无影响。
挥发性麻醉剂仅在铁刺激的情况下减少氧化应激诱导的细胞死亡。预防铁毒性的可能原因是抑制铁摄取,从而间接减少由这种刺激引起的随后细胞内氧化应激。这些数据表明挥发性麻醉剂不存在主要的抗氧化作用。