Kochanek Patrick M, Hendrich Kristy S, Jackson Edwin K, Wisniewski Stephen R, Melick John A, Shore Paul M, Janesko Keri L, Zacharia Lefteris, Ho Chien
Safar Center for Resuscitation Research, The University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2005 Dec;25(12):1596-612. doi: 10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600154.
Hypoperfusion after traumatic brain injury may exacerbate damage. Adenosine, a vasodilator, regulates cerebral blood flow (CBF). Treatment with adenosine receptor agonists has shown benefit in experimental CNS trauma; however, their effects on CBF after injury remain undefined. We used magnetic resonance imaging to assess CBF in uninjured rats both early and at 24 h after intrahippocampal administration of either the nonselective adenosine receptor agonist 2-chloroadenosine (2-CA, 12 nmol) or the A(2A)-receptor agonist 2-p-(2-carboxyethyl)-phenethylamino-5'-N-ethylcarbox-amidoadenosine (CGS 21680, 6 nmol). We also assessed the effects of these agents on cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (CMRglu). We then assessed the effect of 2-CA on CBF at 3.5 to 5 h after controlled cortical impact (CCI). Injection of 2-CA into uninjured rat brain produced marked increases in CBF in ipsilateral hippocampus and cortex versus vehicle (P<0.05); CBF increases persisted even at 24 h. Measurement of hippocampal levels of 2-CA showed persistent increases to 24 h. CGS 21680 produced even more marked global increases in CBF than seen with 2-CA (2-6-fold versus vehicle, P<0.05 in 10/12 regions of interest (ROIs)). Neither agonist altered CMRglu versus vehicle. After CCI, 2-CA increased CBF in ipsilateral hippocampal and hemispheric ROIs (P<0.05 versus vehicle), but the response was attenuated at severe injury levels. We report marked increases in CBF after injection of adenosine receptor agonists into uninjured rat brain despite unaltered CMRglu. 2-Chloroadenosine produced enduring increases in CBF in uninjured brain and attenuated posttraumatic hypoperfusion. Future studies of adenosine-related therapies in CNS injury should address the role of CBF.
创伤性脑损伤后的低灌注可能会加重损伤。腺苷作为一种血管扩张剂,可调节脑血流量(CBF)。腺苷受体激动剂治疗在实验性中枢神经系统创伤中已显示出益处;然而,它们对损伤后脑血流量的影响仍不明确。我们使用磁共振成像来评估在海马内注射非选择性腺苷受体激动剂2-氯腺苷(2-CA,12 nmol)或A(2A)受体激动剂2-p-(2-羧乙基)-苯乙氨基-5'-N-乙基羧酰胺腺苷(CGS 21680,6 nmol)后,未受伤大鼠早期及24小时后的脑血流量。我们还评估了这些药物对脑葡萄糖代谢率(CMRglu)的影响。然后我们评估了2-CA在控制性皮质撞击(CCI)后3.5至5小时对脑血流量的影响。向未受伤大鼠脑内注射2-CA后,与注射赋形剂相比,同侧海马和皮质的脑血流量显著增加(P<0.05);脑血流量增加甚至在24小时时仍持续存在。对海马中2-CA水平的测量显示,其持续增加至24小时。CGS 21680比2-CA引起的全脑血流量增加更为显著(与赋形剂相比为2至6倍,在12个感兴趣区域(ROI)中的10个区域P<0.05)。两种激动剂与赋形剂相比均未改变CMRglu。CCI后,2-CA增加了同侧海马和半球ROI的脑血流量(与赋形剂相比P<0.05),但在严重损伤水平时反应减弱。我们报告,尽管CMRglu未改变,但向未受伤大鼠脑内注射腺苷受体激动剂后,脑血流量显著增加。2-氯腺苷在未受伤脑内引起脑血流量的持久增加,并减轻创伤后低灌注。未来关于中枢神经系统损伤中腺苷相关治疗的研究应关注脑血流量的作用。