Department of Neurosciences, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, United States.
Department of Neurosciences, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, United States.
Exp Neurol. 2018 Jul;305:121-128. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2018.04.007. Epub 2018 Apr 10.
Recent work has implicated spreading depolarization (SD) as a key contributor the progression of acute brain injuries, however development of interventions selectively targeting SD has lagged behind. Initial clinical intervention efforts have focused on observations that relatively high doses of the sedative agent ketamine can completely suppress SD. However, blocking propagation of SD could theoretically prevent beneficial effects of SD in surrounding brain regions. Selective targeting of deleterious consequences of SD (rather than abolition) could be a useful adjunct approach, and be achieved with lower ketamine concentrations. We utilized a brain slice model to test whether deleterious consequences of SD could be prevented by ketamine, using concentrations that did not prevent the initiation and propagation of SD. Studies were conducted using murine brain slices, with focal KCl as an SD stimulus. Consequences of SD were assessed with electrophysiological and imaging measures of ionic and synaptic recovery. Under control conditions, ketamine (up to 30 μM) did not prevent SD, but significantly reduced neuronal Ca loading and the duration of associated extracellular potential shifts. Recovery of postsynaptic potentials after SD was also significantly accelerated. When SD was evoked on a background of mild metabolic compromise, neuronal recovery was substantially impaired. Under compromised conditions, the same concentrations of ketamine reduced ionic and metabolic loading during SD, sufficient to preserve functional recovery after repetitive SDs. These results suggest that lower concentrations of ketamine could be utilized to prevent damaging consequences of SD, while not blocking them outright and thereby preserving potentially protective effects of SD.
最近的研究表明,弥漫性去极化(SD)是急性脑损伤进展的一个关键因素,然而针对 SD 的干预措施的发展却落后了。最初的临床干预措施集中在观察到相对高剂量的镇静剂氯胺酮可以完全抑制 SD。然而,阻断 SD 的传播在理论上可能会阻止 SD 在周围脑区的有益作用。选择性针对 SD 的有害后果(而不是消除)可能是一种有用的辅助方法,可以用较低的氯胺酮浓度来实现。我们利用脑片模型来测试氯胺酮是否可以预防 SD 的有害后果,使用的浓度不会阻止 SD 的起始和传播。研究使用鼠脑片进行,以焦点 KCl 作为 SD 刺激物。用离子和突触恢复的电生理和成像测量来评估 SD 的后果。在对照条件下,氯胺酮(高达 30 μM)不会阻止 SD,但显著减少神经元 Ca 负荷和相关细胞外电势变化的持续时间。SD 后的突触后电位恢复也明显加快。当在轻度代谢损伤的背景下诱发 SD 时,神经元恢复受到严重损害。在受损条件下,相同浓度的氯胺酮可减少 SD 期间的离子和代谢负荷,足以在重复 SD 后维持功能恢复。这些结果表明,较低浓度的氯胺酮可用于预防 SD 的破坏性后果,而不会完全阻断它们,从而保留 SD 的潜在保护作用。