先天预适应对缺血/缺氧耐受的机制:来自哺乳动物冬眠的经验教训。

Conditioning medicine Pub Date : 2019-06-01
Saurav Bhowmick, Kelly L Drew
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摘要

冬眠哺乳动物表现出一种天生的生理能力,可以承受在冬眠和觉醒或缺血再灌注实验模型中发生的血流剧烈波动,而不会造成明显损伤。这些天生的适应对于那些极易受到能量匮乏影响的器官,如大脑和心脏,尤为重要。在脊椎动物中,北极地松鼠(AGS)是一种耐受缺血/缺氧损伤的物种。冬眠是一种长时间的休眠状态,在冬眠过程中,大鼠呼吸频率、心率、血流量、脑灌注和体温(Tb)显著降低。虽然没有能量不足,但在昏睡期间血流量的减少类似于缺血状态。然而,在苏醒或从昏睡中苏醒的过程中,当Tb、呼吸速率、心率和血流量迅速恢复到昏睡前水平时,脑血流量的迅速恢复与中风或心脏骤停后的再灌注相似。AGS在唤醒过程中经历的这种亚致死性缺血/再灌注损伤可能是AGS耐受实验室诱导的其他致死性缺血/再灌注损伤的先决条件。在这篇综述中,我们将总结哺乳动物冬眠对抗缺血/缺氧耐受性的一些机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Mechanisms of innate preconditioning towards ischemia/anoxia tolerance: Lessons from mammalian hibernators.

Mechanisms of innate preconditioning towards ischemia/anoxia tolerance: Lessons from mammalian hibernators.

Mechanisms of innate preconditioning towards ischemia/anoxia tolerance: Lessons from mammalian hibernators.

Hibernating mammals exhibit an innate physiological ability to withstand dramatic fluctuations in blood flow that occurs during hibernation and arousal or experimental models of ischemia reperfusion without significant damage. These innate adaptations are of significance particularly to organs that are highly susceptible to energy deprivation, such as the brain and the heart. Among vertebrates, the arctic ground squirrel (AGS) is a species that tolerates ischemic/anoxic insult. During the process of entering hibernation, a state of prolonged torpor, the AGS undergoes a profound decrease in respiratory rate, heart rate, blood flow, cerebral perfusion, and body temperature (Tb). The reduced level of blood flow during torpor resembles an ischemic state, albeit without energy deficit. During the process of arousal or emergence from torpor, however, when Tb, respiratory rate, heart rate, and blood flow rapidly returns to pre-torpid levels, the rapid return of cerebral blood flow mimics aspects of reperfusion such as is seen after stroke or cardiac arrest. This sublethal ischemic/reperfusion insult experienced by AGS during the process of arousal may precondition AGS to tolerate otherwise lethal ischemic/reperfusion injury induced in the laboratory. In this review, we will summarize some of the mechanisms implemented by mammalian hibernators to combat ischemia/anoxia tolerance.

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