Pluta Ryszard M
Surgical Neurology Branch, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Neurol Res. 2006 Oct;28(7):730-7. doi: 10.1179/016164106X152052.
Nitric oxide (NO), also known as endothelium-derived relaxing factor, is produced by endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in the intima and by neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in the adventitia of cerebral vessels. It dilates the arteries in response to shear stress, metabolic demands, pterygopalatine ganglion stimulation and chemoregulation. Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) interrupts this regulation of cerebral blood flow. Hemoglobin, gradually released from erythrocytes in the subarachnoid space, destroys nNOS-containing neurons in the conductive arteries. This deprives the arteries of NO, leading to initiation of delayed vasospasm. But such vessel narrowing increases shear stress, which stimulates eNOS. This mechanism normally would lead to increased production of NO and dilation of arteries. However, a transient eNOS dysfunction evoked by an increase in the endogenous competitive NOS inhibitor, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA), prevents this vasodilation. eNOS dysfunction has been recently shown to be evoked by increased levels of ADMA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in response to the presence of bilirubin-oxidized fragments (BOXes). A direct cause of the increased ADMA CSF level is most likely decreased ADMA elimination owing to disappearance of ADMA-hydrolyzing enzyme [dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase II (DDAH II)] immunoreactivity in the arteries in spasm. This eNOS dysfunction sustains vasospasm. CSF ADMA levels are closely associated with the degree and time course of vasospasm; when CSF ADMA levels decrease, vasospasm resolves. Thus, exogenous delivery of NO, inhibiting the L-arginine-methylating enzyme or stimulating DDAH II, may provide new therapeutic modalities to prevent and treat vasospasm. This paper will present results of pre-clinical studies supporting the NO-based hypothesis of delayed cerebral vasospasm development and its prevention by increased NO availability.
一氧化氮(NO),也被称为内皮源性舒张因子,由脑血管内膜中的内皮型一氧化氮合酶(eNOS)和外膜中的神经元型一氧化氮合酶(nNOS)产生。它会响应剪切应力、代谢需求、翼腭神经节刺激和化学调节而使动脉扩张。蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)会中断这种对脑血流的调节。从蛛网膜下腔中的红细胞逐渐释放的血红蛋白会破坏传导动脉中含nNOS的神经元。这使动脉失去了NO,导致延迟性血管痉挛的发生。但这种血管狭窄会增加剪切应力,从而刺激eNOS。正常情况下,这种机制会导致NO生成增加和动脉扩张。然而,内源性竞争性NOS抑制剂不对称二甲基精氨酸(ADMA)水平升高所引发的短暂性eNOS功能障碍会阻止这种血管舒张。最近研究表明,脑脊液(CSF)中胆红素氧化片段(BOXes)的存在会导致ADMA水平升高,进而引发eNOS功能障碍。CSF中ADMA水平升高的直接原因很可能是由于痉挛动脉中ADMA水解酶[二甲基精氨酸二甲胺水解酶II(DDAH II)]免疫反应性消失导致ADMA清除减少。这种eNOS功能障碍会使血管痉挛持续。CSF中ADMA水平与血管痉挛的程度和时间进程密切相关;当CSF中ADMA水平降低时,血管痉挛会缓解。因此,外源性输送NO、抑制L-精氨酸甲基化酶或刺激DDAH II,可能会为预防和治疗血管痉挛提供新的治疗方法。本文将展示临床前研究的结果,这些结果支持基于NO的延迟性脑血管痉挛发生假说以及通过增加NO可用性来预防该疾病的观点。