DiGeronimo R J, Gegg C A, Zuckerman S L
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio 78284, USA.
Am J Physiol. 1998 May;274(5):H1495-501. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1998.274.5.H1495.
Altered postictal cerebral blood flow dilatory responses may contribute to brain injury following neonatal seizures. We developed an initial series of experiments to characterize the effects of seizure activity on cerebral vascular dilatory responses during the immediate postictal period. Significant attenuation of postictal hypoxic cerebral vasodilation was noted. We hypothesize that this diminished cerebral dilator response to hypoxia involves depletion of adenosine (Ado) activity resulting from seizure ictus. Additional experiments were designed to evaluate whether the altered postictal responses were related to a depletion of Ado stores or a decreased response to Ado in the postictal state. Farm-bred piglets were equipped with closed cranial windows. Responses to hypercapnia (10% CO2), hypoxia (fractional inspired O2 = 0.10), and topical sodium nitroprusside (10(-6) M) were compared before and after bicuculline-induced seizures (1 mg/kg). Hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilation was significantly attenuated in the first 90 min postictal (control: 56.5 +/- 6%, 10 min postictal: 6.3 +/- 2%, 60 min postictal: 21.7 +/- 6%, and 90 min postictal: 21.6 +/- 5%; P < 0.01), whereas the dilator responses to hypercapnia and topical sodium nitroprusside remained intact. In a separate group of piglets, both a dilating (10(-5) M) and a nondilating concentration of Ado (10(-11) M) were topically administered postictally to measure their effects on pial vessel dilatory response to hypoxia. Dilation to topical Ado (10(-5) M) was not altered postictally compared with control. Ado (10(-11) M) restored hypoxia-induced vasodilation to preseizure control values in the immediate postictal period (control: 51.0 +/- 8%, postictal: 46.7 +/- 8%, P > 0.05). Postictal administration of Ado will restore hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilation in piglets even when a nondilating concentration is employed. This suggests that depletion of Ado with seizure activity is a mechanism for the loss of postictal cerebral vasodilation to hypoxia, and the role of Ado in hypoxic cerebral vasodilation is permissive.
发作后大脑血流扩张反应的改变可能导致新生儿癫痫后脑损伤。我们开展了一系列初步实验,以描述癫痫活动在发作后即刻对脑血管扩张反应的影响。结果发现发作后缺氧性脑血管扩张明显减弱。我们推测,这种对缺氧的脑扩张反应减弱涉及癫痫发作导致的腺苷(Ado)活性耗竭。另外设计了实验来评估发作后反应的改变是与Ado储备的耗竭有关,还是与发作后状态下对Ado的反应降低有关。在农场饲养的仔猪上安装封闭的颅骨视窗。在荷包牡丹碱诱导癫痫发作(1mg/kg)前后,比较对高碳酸血症(10%二氧化碳)、缺氧(吸入氧分数=0.10)和局部应用硝普钠(10⁻⁶M)的反应。发作后最初90分钟内,缺氧诱导的脑血管扩张明显减弱(对照组:56.5±6%,发作后10分钟:6.3±2%,发作后60分钟:21.7±6%,发作后90分钟:21.6±5%;P<0.01),而对高碳酸血症和局部应用硝普钠的扩张反应保持不变。在另一组仔猪中,发作后局部应用扩张浓度(10⁻⁵M)和非扩张浓度的Ado(10⁻¹¹M),以测量它们对软脑膜血管对缺氧扩张反应的影响。与对照组相比,发作后对局部应用Ado(10⁻⁵M)的扩张反应未改变。Ado(10⁻¹¹M)在发作后即刻将缺氧诱导的血管扩张恢复到发作前对照值(对照组:51.0±8%,发作后:46.7±8%,P>0.05)。即使使用非扩张浓度,发作后给予Ado也能恢复仔猪缺氧诱导的脑血管扩张。这表明癫痫发作导致的Ado耗竭是发作后脑血管对缺氧扩张反应丧失的一种机制,且Ado在缺氧性脑血管扩张中的作用是允许性的。