Sekhon L H, Morgan M K, Spence I
Department of Surgery, University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
J Neurosurg. 1997 Mar;86(3):519-24. doi: 10.3171/jns.1997.86.3.0519.
Excision of human cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) can be complicated by postoperative edema and hemorrhage in adjacent brain tissue, despite the complete excision of the malformation. Various theories have purported to explain the hemodynamic basis for this predisposition, including disordered autoregulation causing "normal perfusion pressure breakthrough" and obstruction of venous drainage leading to "occlusive hyperemia." This study did not evaluate the arterial or venous circulations in this scenario, but rather examined the capillaries in adjacent brain parenchyma for any structural deficiencies that would predispose the brain to the postoperative formation of edema and hemorrhage. Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) were created surgically in the necks of 10 male Sprague-Dawley rats, which caused chronic cerebral hypoperfusion with a reduction in cerebral blood flow of between 25% and 50%. Ten age-matched animals were used as controls. Twenty-six weeks after AVF formation the animals were killed and perfusion fixed. Their brain tissue was prepared for light microscopic studies by staining for glial fibrillary acidic protein or for transmission electron microscopy. In the CA1 pyramidal cell region of the hippocampus, it was found that in the animals with AVFs there was increased capillary density and absent astrocytic foot processes in some of these vessels. It was concluded that these vessels had developed as a result of neovascularization in response to chronic cerebral ischemia and that their anatomical configuration made them prone to mechanical weakness and instability following the increase in perfusion pressure that occurs in adjacent brain parenchyma after AVM excision. The authors believe that this study pinpoints a structural accompaniment to the hemodynamic changes that occur in brain tissue in the vicinity of cerebral AVMs that predispose these areas to the formation of edema and hemorrhage after AVM excision.
切除人类脑动静脉畸形(AVM)时,尽管畸形已被完全切除,但术后仍可能并发邻近脑组织的水肿和出血。各种理论试图解释这种易发性的血流动力学基础,包括导致“正常灌注压突破”的自动调节紊乱以及导致“闭塞性充血”的静脉引流受阻。本研究并未评估这种情况下的动脉或静脉循环,而是检查了邻近脑实质中的毛细血管,以寻找可能使大脑在术后易发生水肿和出血的任何结构缺陷。通过手术在10只雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠的颈部创建动静脉瘘(AVF),这导致慢性脑灌注不足,脑血流量减少25%至50%。10只年龄匹配的动物用作对照。AVF形成26周后,处死动物并进行灌注固定。通过胶质纤维酸性蛋白染色或透射电子显微镜对其脑组织进行光镜研究准备。在海马体的CA1锥体细胞区域,发现患有AVF的动物中毛细血管密度增加,并且其中一些血管中星形胶质细胞足突缺失。得出的结论是,这些血管是对慢性脑缺血的新生血管形成反应的结果,并且它们的解剖结构使其在AVM切除后邻近脑实质灌注压增加时易于出现机械性脆弱和不稳定。作者认为,这项研究指出了脑AVM附近脑组织中发生的血流动力学变化的一种结构伴随情况,这种情况使这些区域在AVM切除后易形成水肿和出血。