The effects of anaesthesia on cell death in a porcine model of neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury

Julia K. Gundersen , Ela Chakkarapani , David A. Menassa , Lars Walløe , Marianne Thoresen
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Abstract

Background

Hypothermia is neuroprotective after neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury. However, systemic cooling to hypothermic temperatures is a stressor and may reduce neuroprotection in awake pigs. We compared two experiments of global hypoxic-ischaemic injury in newborn pigs, in which one group received propofol–remifentanil and the other remained awake during post-insult hypothermia treatment.

Methods

In both studies, newborn pigs were anaesthetised using halothane during a 45-min global hypoxic-ischaemic insult induced by reducing Fio2 and graded hypotension until a low-voltage <7 μV electroencephalogram was achieved. On reoxygenation, the pigs were randomly allocated to receive 24 h of normothermia or hypothermia. In the first study (n=18) anaesthesia was discontinued and the pigs' tracheas were extubated. In the second study (n=14) anaesthesia was continued using propofol and remifentanil. Brain injury was assessed after 72 h by classical global histopathology, Purkinje cell count, and apoptotic cell counts in the hippocampus and cerebellum.

Results

Global injury was nearly 10-fold greater in the awake group compared with the anaesthetised group (P=0.021). Hypothermia was neuroprotective in the anaesthetised pigs but not the awake pigs. In the hippocampus, the density of cleaved caspase-3-positive cells was increased in awake compared with anaesthetised pigs in normothermia. In the cerebellum, Purkinje cell density was reduced in the awake pigs irrespective of treatment, and the number of cleaved caspase-3-positive Purkinje cells was greatly increased in hypothermic awake pigs. We detected no difference in cleaved caspase-3 in the granular cell layer or microglial reactivity across the groups.

Conclusions

Our study provides novel insights into the significance of anaesthesia/sedation during hypothermia for achieving optimal neuroprotection.

麻醉对猪新生儿缺氧缺血性脑损伤模型中细胞死亡的影响
背景新生儿缺氧缺血性脑损伤后,低体温具有神经保护作用。然而,全身降温到低体温是一种应激反应,可能会降低清醒猪的神经保护作用。在这两项研究中,我们使用氟烷对新生猪进行麻醉,通过降低 Fio2 和分级降压诱导 45 分钟的整体缺氧缺血性损伤,直到出现低电压脑电图。复氧后,猪被随机分配接受 24 小时常温或低温。第一项研究(18 头猪)停止麻醉,拔除猪的气管。第二项研究(14 头猪)继续使用异丙酚和瑞芬太尼进行麻醉。72小时后,通过经典的整体组织病理学、Purkinje细胞计数以及海马和小脑的凋亡细胞计数对脑损伤进行评估。低温对麻醉猪的神经有保护作用,但对清醒猪没有。在海马中,与麻醉猪相比,清醒猪在正常体温下裂解的caspase-3阳性细胞密度增加。在小脑中,无论治疗与否,清醒猪的浦肯野细胞密度都会降低,而低体温清醒猪的裂解caspase-3阳性浦肯野细胞数量会大大增加。我们检测到各组颗粒细胞层中的裂解caspase-3或小胶质细胞反应性没有差异。结论我们的研究为低体温期间麻醉/镇静对实现最佳神经保护的意义提供了新的见解。
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来源期刊
BJA open
BJA open Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
83 days
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