The Ritchie Centre, Monash Medical Centre, Monash Institute of Medical Research, Clayton Melbourne, VIC, Australia ; Sahlgrenska Academy, Gothenburg University Göteborg, Sweden.
Front Physiol. 2012 Nov 9;3:424. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00424. eCollection 2012.
As clinicians attempt to understand the underlying reasons for the vulnerability of different regions of the developing brain to injury, it is apparent that little is known as to how hypoxia-ischemia may affect the cerebrovasculature in the developing infant. Most of the research investigating the pathogenesis of perinatal brain injury following hypoxia-ischemia has focused on excitotoxicity, oxidative stress and an inflammatory response, with the response of the developing cerebrovasculature receiving less attention. This is surprising as the presentation of devastating and permanent injury such as germinal matrix-intraventricular haemorrhage (GM-IVH) and perinatal stroke are of vascular origin, and the origin of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) may also arise from poor perfusion of the white matter. This highlights that cerebrovasculature injury following hypoxia could primarily be responsible for the injury seen in the brain of many infants diagnosed with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). Interestingly the highly dynamic nature of the cerebral blood vessels in the fetus, and the fluctuations of cerebral blood flow and metabolic demand that occur following hypoxia suggest that the response of blood vessels could explain both regional protection and vulnerability in the developing brain. However, research into how blood vessels respond following hypoxia-ischemia have mostly been conducted in adult models of ischemia or stroke, further highlighting the need to investigate how the developing cerebrovasculature responds and the possible contribution to perinatal brain injury following hypoxia. This review discusses the current concepts on the pathogenesis of perinatal brain injury, the development of the fetal cerebrovasculature and the blood brain barrier (BBB), and key mediators involved with the response of cerebral blood vessels to hypoxia.
当临床医生试图了解发育中大脑不同区域易受损伤的根本原因时,显然对于缺氧缺血如何影响发育中婴儿的脑血管几乎一无所知。大多数研究调查了缺氧缺血后围产期脑损伤的发病机制,主要集中在兴奋性毒性、氧化应激和炎症反应上,而对发育中脑血管的反应关注较少。这令人惊讶,因为诸如生发基质-脑室内出血(GM-IVH)和围产期中风等毁灭性和永久性损伤的表现是血管源性的,而脑室周围白质软化(PVL)的起源也可能源于白质灌注不良。这表明缺氧后脑血管损伤可能主要导致许多被诊断为缺氧缺血性脑病(HIE)的婴儿的大脑损伤。有趣的是,胎儿大脑血管的高度动态性质,以及缺氧后发生的脑血流和代谢需求的波动,表明血管的反应可以解释发育中大脑的区域保护和易损性。然而,关于缺氧缺血后血管如何反应的研究主要在成年缺血或中风模型中进行,这进一步强调了需要研究发育中脑血管的反应以及对缺氧后围产期脑损伤的可能贡献。这篇综述讨论了围产期脑损伤发病机制、胎儿脑血管和血脑屏障(BBB)的发育以及与脑血管对缺氧反应相关的关键介质的当前概念。