Masamoto Kazuto, Tanishita Kazuo
Education and Research Center for Frontier Science and Engineering, University of Electro-Communications, 1-5-1 Chofugaoka, Chofu-shi, Tokyo 182-8585, Japan.
J Biomech Eng. 2009 Jul;131(7):074002. doi: 10.1115/1.3184694.
Oxygen is essential to maintaining normal brain function. A large body of evidence suggests that the partial pressure of oxygen (pO(2)) in brain tissue is physiologically maintained within a narrow range in accordance with region-specific brain activity. Since the transportation of oxygen in the brain tissue is mainly driven by a diffusion process caused by a concentration gradient of oxygen from blood to cells, the spatial organization of the vascular system, in which the oxygen content is higher than in tissue, is a key factor for maintaining effective transportation. In addition, a local mechanism that controls energy demand and blood flow supply plays a critical role in moment-to-moment adjustment of tissue pO(2) in response to dynamically varying brain activity. In this review, we discuss the spatiotemporal structures of brain tissue oxygen transport in relation to local brain activity based on recent reports of tissue pO(2) measurements with polarographic oxygen microsensors in combination with simultaneous recordings of neural activity and local cerebral blood flow in anesthetized animal models. Although a physiological mechanism of oxygen level sensing and control of oxygen transport remains largely unknown, theoretical models of oxygen transport are a powerful tool for better understanding the short-term and long-term effects of local changes in oxygen demand and supply. Finally, emerging new techniques for three-dimensional imaging of the spatiotemporal dynamics of pO(2) map may enable us to provide a whole picture of how the physiological system controls the balance between demand and supply of oxygen during both normal and pathological brain activity.
氧气对于维持大脑正常功能至关重要。大量证据表明,脑组织中的氧分压(pO₂)在生理状态下会根据特定脑区的活动在狭窄范围内维持稳定。由于脑组织中的氧气运输主要由血液到细胞的氧浓度梯度所引发的扩散过程驱动,因此血管系统的空间组织(其中氧含量高于组织)是维持有效运输的关键因素。此外,一种控制能量需求和血流供应的局部机制在响应动态变化的脑活动时,对组织pO₂的实时调整起着关键作用。在本综述中,我们基于近期在麻醉动物模型中使用极谱氧微传感器测量组织pO₂并同时记录神经活动和局部脑血流的报告,讨论与局部脑活动相关的脑组织氧运输的时空结构。尽管氧水平传感和氧运输控制的生理机制在很大程度上仍不为人知,但氧运输的理论模型是更好地理解氧需求和供应局部变化的短期和长期影响的有力工具。最后,用于pO₂图时空动态三维成像的新兴新技术可能使我们能够全面了解生理系统在正常和病理性脑活动期间如何控制氧的供需平衡。