Colbourne F, Corbett D
Division of Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Canada.
Brain Res. 1994 Aug 22;654(2):265-72. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(94)90488-x.
Global ischemia, in the gerbil, produces profound hippocampal CA1 loss which leads to functional abnormalities (e.g. habituation impairment). In experiment 1, gerbils were subjected to 3 or 5 min of normothermic (brain) ischemia. Hypothermic groups were cooled to 32 degrees C for 12 h beginning 1 h after ischemia, while control groups (no hypothermia) regulated their own temperature. Exploration in a novel open field was assessed on days 3, 7 and 10 following ischemia and CA1 neurons were counted after 10- or 30-day survival. Both ischemia durations produced severe CA1 necrosis which resulted in increased open field activity. Hypothermia attenuated this behavioral pattern and substantially reduced CA1 necrosis against 3 min of ischemia when assessed at 10 and 30 days, but was only partially effective against a 5 min occlusion where, in addition, some cell death appeared to be delayed rather than prevented. In experiment 2, gerbils were occluded for 5 min and survived for 30 days. Twenty-four hours of hypothermia initiated 1 h after ischemia resulted in near total preservation of CA1 neurons. Thus, increasing the duration of post-ischemic hypothermia from 12 to 24 h produced much greater neuroprotection against severe ischemia. Prolonged post-ischemic hypothermia may be a valuable intervention in stroke patients.