Hudetz A G, Shen H, Kampine J P
Department of Anesthesiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226, USA.
Am J Physiol. 1998 Mar;274(3):H982-9. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1998.274.3.H982.
We investigated, using a direct, intravital microscopic technique, whether nitric oxide (NO) from neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) plays a role in the cerebral capillary flow response to acute hypoxia. Erythrocyte flow in subsurface capillaries of the frontoparietal cortex of adult Sprague-Dawley rats was visualized using epifluorescence videomicroscopy after fluorescent labeling of red blood cells (RBC) in tracer concentrations. The velocity of labeled RBC in individual capillaries was measured off-line using an image analysis system. Hypoxia was produced by lowering the inspired O2 concentration to 15% for 5 min in control animals and in those pretreated with the selective nNOS inhibitor 7-nitroindazole (7-NI; 20 mg/kg ip). In the control group, hypoxia increased RBC velocity by 34 +/- 8%. In the group treated with 7-NI, this response was reversed to a statistically significant 8 +/- 3% decrease. This paradoxical response to hypoxia after 7-NI was observed in nearly all capillaries. 7-NI itself decreased the baseline RBC velocity by 12 +/- 4%. The cerebral hyperemic response to hypoxia was also assessed with the laser Doppler flow (LDF) technique. In control animals, hypoxia produced a 33 +/- 6% increase in LDF, similar to the increase in RBC velocity. After 7-NI treatment, the response to hypoxia was moderately attenuated but still significant at a 19 +/- 2% increase in LDF. These results support the role of NO from nNOS in the cerebral hyperemic response to hypoxia. They imply that 7-NI interfered with a physiological mechanism that was fundamental to cerebral capillary flow regulation and provide direct evidence that cerebral capillary perfusion may be dissociated from a concurrent change in regional tissue perfusion as reflected by LDF. In conclusion, NO from nNOS contributes to the maintenance of RBC flow in cerebral capillaries and plays a critically important role in the selective regulation of cerebral capillary flow during hypoxia.
我们采用一种直接的活体显微镜技术,研究了来自神经元型一氧化氮合酶(nNOS)的一氧化氮(NO)在大脑毛细血管对急性缺氧的血流反应中是否发挥作用。在用示踪剂浓度对成年Sprague-Dawley大鼠的红细胞(RBC)进行荧光标记后,使用落射荧光视频显微镜观察额顶叶皮层浅表毛细血管中的红细胞流动。使用图像分析系统离线测量单个毛细血管中标记红细胞的速度。在对照动物和用选择性nNOS抑制剂7-硝基吲唑(7-NI;20mg/kg腹腔注射)预处理的动物中,通过将吸入的氧气浓度降至15%持续5分钟来产生缺氧。在对照组中,缺氧使红细胞速度增加了34±8%。在接受7-NI治疗的组中,这种反应逆转,出现了具有统计学意义的8±3%的下降。在几乎所有毛细血管中都观察到了7-NI处理后对缺氧的这种矛盾反应。7-NI本身使基线红细胞速度降低了12±4%。还使用激光多普勒血流(LDF)技术评估了大脑对缺氧的充血反应。在对照动物中,缺氧使LDF增加了33±6%,与红细胞速度的增加相似。7-NI治疗后,对缺氧的反应略有减弱,但LDF仍有19±2%的显著增加。这些结果支持了nNOS产生的NO在大脑对缺氧的充血反应中的作用。它们表明7-NI干扰了大脑毛细血管血流调节的一种基本生理机制,并提供了直接证据,即大脑毛细血管灌注可能与LDF反映的区域组织灌注的同时变化相分离。总之,nNOS产生的NO有助于维持大脑毛细血管中的红细胞流动,并在缺氧期间大脑毛细血管血流的选择性调节中发挥至关重要的作用。