Rosenblum W I
Department Pathology (Neuropathology), Medical College of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond 23298-0017, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 1997 May;14(5):313-26. doi: 10.1089/neu.1997.14.313.
This review describes histopathologic observations made with both light and electron microscopy using both conventional staining techniques and histochemistry. Several conditions are analyzed: Ischemic cell change; delayed neuronal death; selective vulnerability. The histopathologic support for the calcium hypothesis and for the excitotoxic hypothesis explaining neuronal death is also reviewed. The findings lead to several suggestions relevant to attempts at developing interventional therapies administered after the onset of ischemia/hypoxia. (1) Except in gerbils, delayed neuronal death and more rapid neuronal death appear to be on the same continuum of cellular events. The lag between ischemia and either onset or termination of these shared events depends upon the severity and/or duration of ischemia/hypoxia. We still do not know whether the "delay," when it occurs, is a delay between ischemia and initiation of the lethal sequence or is, instead, a delay between an immediate initiation of the sequence and its lethal termination. (2) Selective vulnerability (e.g., of CA1 sector in hippocampus) is only relative. The changes are again those of ischemic cell change and are identical to the changes seen elsewhere in more severe ischemia. (3) There is histopathologic support for both the calcium hypothesis and for the cytotoxic hypothesis. Indeed, there is histopathologic support linking the two hypotheses and linking these mechanisms to the appearance of ischemic cell change. However, the histopathologic data are surprisingly sparse. The role of either hypothesis in explaining neuronal death in all areas of brain, in all types of ischemic insult, and at all times following such an insult remains to be established. (3) Apoptosis may be an important mode of neuronal death following ischemia. It differs from acute ischemic cell change; nevertheless, both calcium overload and/or excitotoxic neurotransmitters may trigger apoptosis. (4) Third cell change has been described: Eosinophilic neurons that are not shrunken and whose nuclei are not pyknotic but contain clumped chromatin. The pathogenesis and fate of these neurons remains uncertain. It is possible that they represent early apoptotic neurons. Adequate assessment of apoptosis and its relationship (to both these neurons and to neurons displaying classical ischemic cell change) may depend upon dual staining with conventional aniline dyes and with histochemical techniques designed to detect intranuclear fragments of DNA.
本综述描述了使用传统染色技术和组织化学,通过光学显微镜和电子显微镜所做的组织病理学观察。分析了几种情况:缺血性细胞变化;迟发性神经元死亡;选择性易损性。还综述了支持钙假说和解释神经元死亡的兴奋性毒性假说的组织病理学依据。这些发现提出了一些与尝试开发缺血/缺氧发作后给予的介入治疗相关的建议。(1)除沙鼠外,迟发性神经元死亡和更快的神经元死亡似乎处于细胞事件的同一连续体上。缺血与这些共同事件的开始或终止之间的延迟取决于缺血/缺氧的严重程度和/或持续时间。我们仍然不知道“延迟”出现时,是缺血与致命序列启动之间的延迟,还是相反,是序列立即启动与其致命终止之间的延迟。(2)选择性易损性(例如海马体CA1区)只是相对的。这些变化同样是缺血性细胞变化,与在更严重缺血的其他部位所见的变化相同。(3)钙假说和细胞毒性假说都有组织病理学依据。事实上,有组织病理学依据将这两个假说联系起来,并将这些机制与缺血性细胞变化的出现联系起来。然而,组织病理学数据出奇地稀少。这两种假说在解释脑的所有区域、所有类型缺血性损伤以及此类损伤后的所有时间的神经元死亡中的作用仍有待确定。(3)凋亡可能是缺血后神经元死亡的一种重要模式。它不同于急性缺血性细胞变化;然而,钙超载和/或兴奋性毒性神经递质都可能触发凋亡。(4)已经描述了第三种细胞变化:嗜酸性神经元,其不萎缩,细胞核不固缩,但含有聚集的染色质。这些神经元的发病机制和命运仍不确定。它们有可能代表早期凋亡神经元。对凋亡及其与这些神经元以及与表现出经典缺血性细胞变化的神经元之间关系的充分评估可能取决于用传统苯胺染料和旨在检测核内DNA片段的组织化学技术进行双重染色。