Lundgren J, Smith M L, Blennow G, Siesjö B K
Department of Neurobiology, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden.
Exp Brain Res. 1994;99(1):43-55. doi: 10.1007/BF00241411.
The influence of hyperthermia and hypothermia on epileptic brain damage was studied in rats, in which status epilepticus was induced by flurothyl. Histopathological changes were examined by light microscopy after 1 or 7 days of recovery. Two series of animals were studied. In the first, short periods of seizures (20 and 25 min) were employed to examine whether moderate hyperthermia (39.5 degrees C) would aggravate epileptic brain damage, and a longer period (45 min) was used to investigate whether moderate hypothermia (32.5 degrees C) would ameliorate the damage. The second series investigated whether brief periods of status epilepticus (10 min) would cause brain damage if hyperthermia were high or excessive. For this series, animals with body temperatures of 37.0, 39.0, and 41.0 degrees C were studied. Data from normothermic animals (37.5 degrees C) confirmed previously described neuronal damage. Although hyperthermic animals failed to show increased damage in the CA1 sector, or in the hilar region of the dentate gyrus, they showed enhanced damage in the neocortex and globus pallidus (GP). In substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNPR) four out of five hyperthermic animals had bilateral infarcts after 20 min of status epilepticus, whereas no normothermic animal showed such damage. Hypothermia seemed to ameliorate epileptic brain damage in the neocortex (n.s.) and GP (P < 0.05) following status epilepticus for 45 min. Three out of seven hypothermic animals had mild SNPR involvement compared to severe infarction of the nucleus in five out of six normothermic animals (P < 0.05). Thus, hyperthermia aggravated and hypothermia ameliorated epileptic brain damage both in regions showing selective neuronal necrosis (neocortex) and in regions developing pan-necrosis (GP and SNPR). The second series displayed an unexpected result of excessive hyperthermia. Animals subjected to only 10 min of status epilepticus at a temperature of 41 degrees C showed not only neocortical lesions, but also moderate to extensive damage to the hippocampus (CA1, subiculum, and dentate gyrus). It is concluded that at high body and brain temperature, brief periods of status epilepticus can yield extensive brain damage, primarily affecting the hippocampus.
在大鼠中研究了体温过高和过低对癫痫性脑损伤的影响,其中癫痫持续状态由三氟乙烯诱发。在恢复1天或7天后,通过光学显微镜检查组织病理学变化。研究了两组动物。第一组,采用短时间癫痫发作(20和25分钟)来检查中度体温过高(39.5摄氏度)是否会加重癫痫性脑损伤,采用较长时间(45分钟)来研究中度体温过低(32.5摄氏度)是否会减轻损伤。第二组研究如果体温过高或过高,短暂的癫痫持续状态(10分钟)是否会导致脑损伤。对于这一组,研究了体温为37.0、39.0和41.0摄氏度的动物。来自正常体温动物(37.5摄氏度)的数据证实了先前描述的神经元损伤。尽管体温过高的动物在海马体CA1区或齿状回的门区未显示损伤增加,但它们在新皮层和苍白球(GP)显示出损伤加重。在黑质网状部(SNPR),五分之四的体温过高动物在癫痫持续状态20分钟后出现双侧梗死,而正常体温动物未显示这种损伤。体温过低似乎在癫痫持续状态45分钟后减轻了新皮层(无统计学意义)和苍白球(P<0.05)的癫痫性脑损伤。与六分之五的正常体温动物中核的严重梗死相比,七分之三的体温过低动物有轻度的SNPR受累(P<0.05)。因此,体温过高加重而体温过低减轻了在显示选择性神经元坏死的区域(新皮层)和发生全坏死的区域(苍白球和黑质网状部)的癫痫性脑损伤。第二组显示了体温过高的意外结果。在41摄氏度温度下仅经历10分钟癫痫持续状态的动物不仅显示出新皮层病变,还显示出海马体(CA1、下托和齿状回)中度至广泛的损伤。得出的结论是,在高体温和高脑温时,短暂的癫痫持续状态可导致广泛的脑损伤,主要影响海马体。