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2.
Bioengineering (Basel) ; 11(3)2024 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38534490

RESUMO

Brain maturity and many clinical treatments such as therapeutic hypothermia (TH) can significantly influence the morphology of neonatal EEG seizures after hypoxia-ischemia (HI), and so there is a need for generalized automatic seizure identification. This study validates efficacy of advanced deep-learning pattern classifiers based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) for seizure detection after HI in fetal sheep and determines the effects of maturation and brain cooling on their accuracy. The cohorts included HI-normothermia term (n = 7), HI-hypothermia term (n = 14), sham-normothermia term (n = 5), and HI-normothermia preterm (n = 14) groups, with a total of >17,300 h of recordings. Algorithms were trained and tested using leave-one-out cross-validation and k-fold cross-validation approaches. The accuracy of the term-trained seizure detectors was consistently excellent for HI-normothermia preterm data (accuracy = 99.5%, area under curve (AUC) = 99.2%). Conversely, when the HI-normothermia preterm data were used in training, the performance on HI-normothermia term and HI-hypothermia term data fell (accuracy = 98.6%, AUC = 96.5% and accuracy = 96.9%, AUC = 89.6%, respectively). Findings suggest that HI-normothermia preterm seizures do not contain all the spectral features seen at term. Nevertheless, an average 5-fold cross-validated accuracy of 99.7% (AUC = 99.4%) was achieved from all seizure detectors. This significant advancement highlights the reliability of the proposed deep-learning algorithms in identifying clinically translatable post-HI stereotypic seizures in 256Hz recordings, regardless of maturity and with minimal impact from hypothermia.

3.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; : 271678X241236014, 2024 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38415649

RESUMO

Antenatal hypoxia-ischaemia (HI) in preterm fetal sheep can trigger delayed evolution of severe, cystic white matter injury (WMI), in a similar timecourse to WMI in preterm infants. We therefore examined how severe hypoxia-ischaemia affects recovery of electroencephalographic (EEG) activity. Chronically instrumented preterm fetal sheep (0.7 gestation) received 25 min of complete umbilical cord occlusion (UCO, n = 9) or sham occlusion (controls, n = 9), and recovered for 21 days. HI was associated with a shift to lower frequency EEG activity for the first 5 days with persisting loss of EEG power in the delta and theta bands, and initial loss of power in the alpha and beta bands in the first 14 days of recovery. In the final 3 days of recovery, there was a marked rhythmic shift towards higher frequency EEG activity after UCO. The UCO group spent less time in high-voltage sleep, and in the early evening (7:02 pm ± 47 min) abruptly stopped cycling between sleep states, with a shift to a high frequency state for 2 h 48 min ± 40 min, with tonic electromyographic activity. These findings demonstrate persisting EEG and sleep state dysmaturation after severe hypoxia-ischaemia. Loss of fetal or neonatal sleep state cycling in the early evening may be a useful biomarker for evolving cystic WMI.

4.
Exp Neurol ; 371: 114611, 2024 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37944882

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: There is growing evidence that infants with mild hypoxic-ischemic (HI) encephalopathy have increased risk of brain injury and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes. Currently, there is no approved treatment for these infants. It was previously shown that blocking connexin 43 hemichannels is neuroprotective in models of moderate to severe HI injury. However, it is yet to be established whether these channels play a role in the evolution of mild HI brain injury, and whether blocking these channels after mild HI is neuroprotective. METHODS: HI was induced in postnatal day 10 rats of both sexes by right carotid artery ligation followed by 80 min of hypoxia in 8% oxygen. Pups receiving HI were randomised to receive intraperitoneal injections of either saline, vehicle (2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin polyethylene glycol-400), or tonabersat (2 mg/kg), at 60 min, 24 h, and 48 h after hypoxia. Seven days after HI, brains were harvested for measurement of volume loss and histological analysis. RESULTS: HI resulted in a significant reduction in hemispheric, hippocampal, and white matter volumes, which were significantly attenuated after treatment with tonabersat. HI was also associated with a significant reduction in numbers of neurons in the CA1 and CA3 hippocampal regions, a reduction in the numbers of oligodendrocytes in the corpus callosum, and an increase in the number of astrocytes in both regions, which were significantly attenuated by tonabersat treatment. There were no differences in rectal temperatures between tonabersat- and vehicle-treated rat pups. CONCLUSIONS: Blockade of connexin hemichannels with tonabersat significantly reduced mild HI injury in the hippocampus and white matter, without causing hypothermia.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Fármacos Neuroprotetores , Animais , Feminino , Masculino , Ratos , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Encéfalo/patologia , Lesões Encefálicas/patologia , Conexinas , Hipóxia/patologia , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/prevenção & controle , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/patologia , Fármacos Neuroprotetores/farmacologia , Fármacos Neuroprotetores/uso terapêutico
5.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; : 271678X231197380, 2023 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37824725

RESUMO

Perinatal infection or inflammation are associated with adverse neurodevelopmental effects and cardiovascular impairments in preterm infants. Most preclinical studies have examined the effects of gram-negative bacterial inflammation on the developing brain, although gram-positive bacterial infections are a major contributor to adverse outcomes. Killed Su-strain group 3 A streptococcus pyogenes (Picibanil, OK-432) is being used for pleurodesis in fetal hydrothorax/chylothorax. We therefore examined the neural and cardiovascular effects of clinically relevant intra-plural infusions of Picibanil. Chronically instrumented preterm (0.7 gestation) fetal sheep received an intra-pleural injection of low-dose (0.1 mg, n = 8) or high-dose (1 mg, n = 8) Picibanil or saline-vehicle (n = 8). Fetal brains were collected for histology one-week after injection. Picibanil exposure was associated with sustained diffuse white matter inflammation and loss of immature and mature oligodendrocytes and subcortical neurons, and associated loss of EEG power. These neural effects were not dose-dependent. Picibanil was also associated with acute changes in heart rate and attenuation of the maturational increase in mean arterial pressure. Even a single exposure to a low-dose gram-positive bacterial-mediated inflammation during the antenatal period is associated with prolonged changes in vascular and neural function.

6.
J Physiol ; 2023 Jul 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37432936

RESUMO

Hypoxia-ischaemia (HI) before birth is a key risk factor for stillbirth and severe neurodevelopmental disability in survivors, including cerebral palsy, although there are no reliable biomarkers to detect at risk fetuses that may have suffered a transient period of severe HI. We investigated time and frequency domain measures of fetal heart rate variability (FHRV) for 3 weeks after HI in preterm fetal sheep at 0.7 gestation (equivalent to preterm humans) until 0.8 gestation (equivalent to term humans). We have previously shown that this is associated with delayed development of severe white and grey matter injury, including cystic white matter injury (WMI) resembling that observed in human preterm infants. HI was associated with suppression of time and frequency domain measures of FHRV and reduced their circadian rhythmicity during the first 3 days of recovery. By contrast, circadian rhythms of multiple measures of FHRV were exaggerated over the final 2 weeks of recovery, mediated by a greater reduction in FHRV during the morning nadir, but no change in the evening peak. These data suggest that the time of day at which FHRV measurements are taken affects their diagnostic utility. We further propose that circadian changes in FHRV may be a low-cost, easily applied biomarker of antenatal HI and evolving brain injury. KEY POINTS: Hypoxia-ischaemia (HI) before birth is a key risk factor for stillbirth and probably for disability in survivors, although there are no reliable biomarkers for antenatal brain injury. In preterm fetal sheep, acute HI that is known to lead to delayed development of severe white and grey matter injury over 3 weeks, was associated with early suppression of multiple time and frequency domain measures of fetal heart rate variability (FHRV) and loss of their circadian rhythms during the first 3 days after HI. Over the final 2 weeks of recovery after HI, exaggerated circadian rhythms of frequency domain FHRV measures were observed. The morning nadirs were lower with no change in the evening peak of FHRV. Circadian changes in FHRV may be a low-cost, easily applied biomarker of antenatal HI and evolving brain injury.

8.
Exp Neurol ; 363: 114376, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36889575

RESUMO

Reduced grey matter volume in preterm infants is associated with later disability, but its time course and relationship with white matter injury are not well understood. We recently showed that moderate-severe hypoxia-ischaemia (HI) in preterm fetal sheep led to severe cystic injury 2-3 weeks later. In the same cohort we now show profound hippocampal neuronal loss from 3 days after HI. By contrast, reduction in cortical area and perimeter developed much more slowly, with maximum reduction at day 21. There was transient upregulation of cleaved caspase-3-positive apoptosis in the cortex at day 3 but no change in neuronal density or macroscopic injury of the cortex. Both microglia and astrocytes were transiently upregulated in the grey matter. EEG power was initially profoundly suppressed but partially recovered by 21 days of recovery, and final power was correlated with white matter area (p < 0.001, r2 = 0.75, F = 24.19), cortical area (p = 0.004, r2 = 0.44, F = 11.90) and hippocampi area (p = 0.049, r2 = 0.23, F = 4.58). In conclusion, the present study suggests that in preterm fetal sheep, hippocampal injury is established within a few days of acute HI, but impaired cortical growth develops slowly, in a similar time course to severe white matter injury.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Recém-Nascido , Humanos , Animais , Ovinos , Substância Cinzenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/complicações , Recém-Nascido Prematuro , Hipóxia/complicações , Isquemia/complicações
9.
J Physiol ; 601(10): 1999-2016, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36999348

RESUMO

Maternal magnesium sulphate (MgSO4 ) treatment is widely recommended before preterm birth for neuroprotection. However, this is controversial because there is limited evidence that MgSO4 provides long-term neuroprotection. Preterm fetal sheep (104 days gestation; term is 147 days) were assigned randomly to receive sham occlusion with saline infusion (n = 6) or i.v. infusion with MgSO4 (n = 7) or vehicle (saline, n = 6) from 24 h before hypoxia-ischaemia induced by umbilical cord occlusion until 24 h after occlusion. Sheep were killed after 21 days of recovery, for fetal brain histology. Functionally, MgSO4 did not improve long-term EEG recovery. Histologically, in the premotor cortex and striatum, MgSO4 infusion attenuated post-occlusion astrocytosis (GFAP+ ) and microgliosis but did not affect numbers of amoeboid microglia or improve neuronal survival. In the periventricular and intragyral white matter, MgSO4 was associated with fewer total (Olig-2+ ) oligodendrocytes compared with vehicle + occlusion. Numbers of mature (CC1+ ) oligodendrocytes were reduced to a similar extent in both occlusion groups compared with sham occlusion. In contrast, MgSO4 was associated with an intermediate improvement in myelin density in the intragyral and periventricular white matter tracts. In conclusion, a clinically comparable dose of MgSO4 was associated with moderate improvements in white and grey matter gliosis and myelin density but did not improve EEG maturation or neuronal or oligodendrocyte survival. KEY POINTS: Magnesium sulphate is widely recommended before preterm birth for neuroprotection; however, there is limited evidence that magnesium sulphate provides long-term neuroprotection. In preterm fetal sheep exposed to hypoxia-ischaemia (HI), MgSO4 was associated with attenuated astrocytosis and microgliosis in the premotor cortex and striatum but did not improve neuronal survival after recovery to term-equivalent age, 21 days after HI. Magnesium sulphate was associated with loss of total oligodendrocytes in the periventricular and intragyral white matter tracts, whereas mature, myelinating oligodendrocytes were reduced to a similar extent in both occlusion groups. In the same regions, MgSO4 was associated with an intermediate improvement in myelin density. Functionally, MgSO4 did not improve long-term recovery of EEG power, frequency or sleep stage cycling. A clinically comparable dose of MgSO4 was associated with moderate improvements in white and grey matter gliosis and myelin density but did not improve EEG maturation or neuronal or oligodendrocyte survival.


Assuntos
Nascimento Prematuro , Substância Branca , Recém-Nascido , Humanos , Feminino , Ovinos , Animais , Substância Cinzenta , Asfixia/tratamento farmacológico , Sulfato de Magnésio/farmacologia , Sulfato de Magnésio/uso terapêutico , Gliose/tratamento farmacológico , Sobrevivência Celular , Eletroencefalografia , Isquemia/tratamento farmacológico , Hipóxia
10.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(4)2023 Feb 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36835117

RESUMO

Therapeutic hypothermia significantly improves outcomes after neonatal hypoxic-ischemic (HI) encephalopathy but is only partially protective. There is evidence that cortical inhibitory interneuron circuits are particularly vulnerable to HI and that loss of interneurons may be an important contributor to long-term neurological dysfunction in these infants. In the present study, we examined the hypothesis that the duration of hypothermia has differential effects on interneuron survival after HI. Near-term fetal sheep received sham ischemia or cerebral ischemia for 30 min, followed by cerebral hypothermia from 3 h after ischemia end and continued up to 48 h, 72 h, or 120 h recovery. Sheep were euthanized after 7 days for histology. Hypothermia up to 48 h recovery resulted in moderate neuroprotection of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD)+ and parvalbumin+ interneurons but did not improve survival of calbindin+ cells. Hypothermia up to 72 h recovery was associated with significantly increased survival of all three interneuron phenotypes compared with sham controls. By contrast, while hypothermia up to 120 h recovery did not further improve (or impair) GAD+ or parvalbumin+ neuronal survival compared with hypothermia up to 72 h, it was associated with decreased survival of calbindin+ interneurons. Finally, protection of parvalbumin+ and GAD+ interneurons, but not calbindin+ interneurons, with hypothermia was associated with improved recovery of electroencephalographic (EEG) power and frequency by day 7 after HI. The present study demonstrates differential effects of increasing the duration of hypothermia on interneuron survival after HI in near-term fetal sheep. These findings may contribute to the apparent preclinical and clinical lack of benefit of very prolonged hypothermia.


Assuntos
Infarto Cerebral , Hipotermia Induzida , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Animais , Infarto Cerebral/patologia , Infarto Cerebral/terapia , Hipotermia Induzida/métodos , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/patologia , Interneurônios/patologia , Isquemia/patologia , Isquemia/terapia , Parvalbuminas , Ovinos
11.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; 43(6): 947-961, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703575

RESUMO

Exposure to hypoxic-ischaemia (HI) is consistently followed by a delayed fall in cerebral perfusion. In preterm fetal sheep this is associated with impaired cerebral oxygenation, consistent with mismatch between perfusion and metabolism. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that alpha-adrenergic inhibition after HI would improve cerebral perfusion, and so attenuate mismatch and reduce neural injury. Chronically instrumented preterm (0.7 gestation) fetal sheep received sham-HI (n = 10) or HI induced by complete umbilical cord occlusion for 25 minutes. From 15 minutes to 8 hours after HI, fetuses received either an intravenous infusion of a non-selective alpha-adrenergic antagonist, phentolamine (10 mg bolus, 10 mg/h infusion, n = 10), or saline (n = 10). Fetal brains were processed for histology 72 hours post-HI. Phentolamine infusion was associated with increased epileptiform transient activity and a greater fall in cerebral oxygenation in the early post-HI recovery phase. Histologically, phentolamine was associated with greater loss of oligodendrocytes and hippocampal neurons. In summary, contrary to our hypothesis, alpha-adrenergic inhibition increased epileptiform transient activity with an exaggerated fall in cerebral oxygenation, and increased neural injury, suggesting that alpha-adrenergic receptor activation after HI is an important endogenous neuroprotective mechanism.


Assuntos
Hipóxia Fetal , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Feminino , Humanos , Animais , Ovinos , Receptores Adrenérgicos alfa/metabolismo , Fentolamina/farmacologia , Hipóxia/patologia , Isquemia , Hipocampo/metabolismo , Neurônios/metabolismo , Adrenérgicos , Oligodendroglia/patologia , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/patologia
14.
Brain ; 146(4): 1453-1466, 2023 04 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36087304

RESUMO

Cystic white matter injury is highly associated with severe neurodevelopmental disability and cerebral palsy in preterm infants, yet its pathogenesis remains poorly understood and there is no established treatment. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that slowly evolving cystic white matter injury after hypoxia-ischaemia is mediated by programmed necrosis initiated by tumour necrosis factor. Tumour necrosis factor blockade was begun 3 days after hypoxia-ischaemia to target the tertiary phase of injury, when most secondary cell death is thought to be complete. Chronically instrumented preterm foetal sheep (0.7 gestation) received 25 min of hypoxia-ischaemia induced by complete umbilical cord occlusion or sham-umbilical cord occlusion (controls, n = 10), followed by intracerebroventricular infusion of the soluble TNF inhibitor, Etanercept, at 3, 8 and 13 days after umbilical cord occlusion (n = 9) or vehicle (n = 9). Foetal brains were processed for histology at 21 days after umbilical cord occlusion. Umbilical cord occlusion with vehicle was associated with a spectrum of macroscopic white matter degeneration, including white matter atrophy, ventriculomegaly and overt temporal lobe cystic white matter injury. Oligodendrocyte maturational arrest and impaired labelling of myelin proteins, characteristic of diffuse white matter injury, was observed in the parietal lobe and surrounding the cystic lesions in the temporal lobe. Etanercept markedly attenuated cystic white matter injury on the side of the intracerebroventricular infusion, with partial contralateral protection. Further, Etanercept improved oligodendrocyte maturation and labelling of myelin proteins in the temporal and parietal lobes. The present study shows that cystic white matter injury reflects late-onset tertiary cell death mediated by delayed neuroinflammation through the tumour necrosis factor pathway. Delayed tumour necrosis factor blockade markedly attenuated cystic white matter injury and restored oligodendrocyte maturation and deficits in myelin protein expression. These data suggest that delayed tumour necrosis factor blockade may represent a viable therapeutic strategy to reduce the risk of cystic and diffuse white matter injury and potentially cerebral palsy after preterm birth, with a surprisingly wide therapeutic window.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas , Paralisia Cerebral , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Nascimento Prematuro , Substância Branca , Recém-Nascido , Humanos , Feminino , Ovinos , Animais , Substância Branca/patologia , Asfixia/complicações , Etanercepte/farmacologia , Etanercepte/uso terapêutico , Etanercepte/metabolismo , Recém-Nascido Prematuro , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/patologia , Lesões Encefálicas/patologia , Fatores de Necrose Tumoral/metabolismo
15.
PLoS One ; 17(12): e0278874, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36512546

RESUMO

Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) is a major global cause of neonatal death and lifelong disability. Large animal translational studies of hypoxic ischemic brain injury, such as those conducted in fetal sheep, have and continue to play a key role in furthering our understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of injury and developing new treatment strategies for clinical translation. At present, the quantification of neurons in histological images consists of slow, manually intensive morphological assessment, requiring many repeats by an expert, which can prove to be time-consuming and prone to human error. Hence, there is an urgent need to automate the neuron classification and quantification process. In this article, we present a 'Gradient Direction, Grey level Co-occurrence Matrix' (GD-GLCM) image training method which outperforms and simplifies the standard training methodology using texture analysis to cell-classification. This is achieved by determining the Grey level Co-occurrence Matrix of the gradient direction of a cell image followed by direct passing to a classifier in the form of a Multilayer Perceptron (MLP). Hence, avoiding all texture feature computation steps. The proposed MLP is trained on both healthy and dying neurons that are manually identified by an expert and validated on unseen hypoxic-ischemic brain slice images from the fetal sheep in utero model. We compared the performance of our classifier using the gradient magnitude dataset as well as the gradient direction dataset. We also compare the performance of a perceptron, a 1-layer MLP, and a 2-layer MLP to each other. We demonstrate here a way of accurately identifying both healthy and dying cortical neurons obtained from brain slice images of the fetal sheep model under global hypoxia to high precision by identifying the most minimised MLP architecture, minimised input space (GLCM size) and minimised training data (GLCM representations) to achieve the highest performance over the standard methodology.


Assuntos
Encéfalo , Redes Neurais de Computação , Recém-Nascido , Animais , Humanos , Ovinos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Neurônios , Hipóxia
16.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(17)2022 Sep 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36077587

RESUMO

Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy is brain injury resulting from the loss of oxygen and blood supply around the time of birth. It is associated with a high risk of death or disability. The only approved treatment is therapeutic hypothermia. Therapeutic hypothermia has consistently been shown to significantly reduce the risk of death and disability in infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. However, approximately 29% of infants treated with therapeutic hypothermia still develop disability. Recent preclinical and clinical studies have shown that there is still persistent neuroinflammation even after treating with therapeutic hypothermia, which may contribute to the deficits seen in infants despite treatment. This suggests that potentially targeting this persistent neuroinflammation would have an additive benefit in addition to therapeutic hypothermia. A potential additive treatment is Exendin-4, which is a glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist. Preclinical data from various in vitro and in vivo disease models have shown that Exendin-4 has anti-inflammatory, mitochondrial protective, anti-apoptotic, anti-oxidative and neurotrophic effects. Although preclinical studies of the effect of Exendin-4 in perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury are limited, a seminal study in neonatal mice showed that Exendin-4 had promising neuroprotective effects. Further studies on Exendin-4 neuroprotection for perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury, including in large animal translational models are warranted to better understand its safety, window of opportunity and effectiveness as an adjunct with therapeutic hypothermia.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas , Hipotermia Induzida , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Animais , Lesões Encefálicas/complicações , Exenatida/farmacologia , Feminino , Humanos , Hipotermia Induzida/métodos , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/complicações , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/tratamento farmacológico , Camundongos , Doenças Neuroinflamatórias , Gravidez
17.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(15)2022 Jul 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35955531

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) around the time of birth results from loss of oxygen (hypoxia) and blood supply (ischemia). Exogenous infusion of multi-potential cells, including human amnion epithelial cells (hAECs), can reduce hypoxic-ischemic (HI) brain injury. However, there are few data on treatment of severe HI in large animal paradigms at term. The aim of the current study was to determine whether infusion of hAECs early after injury may reduce brain damage after ischemia in near-term fetal sheep. METHODS: Chronically instrumented fetal sheep (0.85 gestation) received 30 min of global cerebral ischemia followed by intravenous infusion of hAECs from 2 h after the end of ischemia (ischemia-hAEC, n = 6) or saline (ischemia-vehicle, n = 7). Sham control animals received sham ischemia with vehicle infusion (sham control, n = 8). RESULTS: Ischemia was associated with significant suppression of EEG power and spectral edge frequency until the end of the experiment and a secondary rise in cortical impedance from 24 to 72 h, which were not attenuated by hAEC administration. Ischemia was associated with loss of neurons in the cortex, thalamus, striatum and hippocampus, loss of white matter oligodendrocytes and increased microglial numbers in the white matter, which were not affected by hAEC infusion. CONCLUSIONS: A single intravenous administration of hAECs did not reduce electrographic or histological brain damage after 30 min of global cerebral ischemia in near-term fetal sheep.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Âmnio , Animais , Lesões Encefálicas/patologia , Células Epiteliais/patologia , Humanos , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/patologia , Infusões Intravenosas , Isquemia , Neuroproteção , Ovinos
18.
Front Pediatr ; 10: 925951, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35903161

RESUMO

Perinatal hypoxia-ischemia (HI) is still a significant contributor to mortality and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in term and preterm infants. HI brain injury evolves over hours to days, and involves complex interactions between the endogenous protective and pathological processes. Understanding the timing of evolution of injury is vital to guide treatment. Post-HI recovery is associated with a typical neurophysiological profile, with stereotypic changes in cerebral perfusion and oxygenation. After the initial recovery, there is a delayed, prolonged reduction in cerebral perfusion related to metabolic suppression, followed by secondary deterioration with hyperperfusion and increased cerebral oxygenation, associated with altered neurovascular coupling and impaired cerebral autoregulation. These changes in cerebral perfusion are associated with the stages of evolution of injury and injury severity. Further, iatrogenic factors can also affect cerebral oxygenation during the early period of deranged metabolism, and improving clinical management may improve neuroprotection. We will review recent evidence that changes in cerebral oxygenation and metabolism after HI may be useful biomarkers of prognosis.

19.
Biomedicines ; 10(6)2022 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35740466

RESUMO

Perinatal brain injury secondary to hypoxia-ischemia and/or infection/inflammation remains a major cause of disability. Therapeutic hypothermia significantly improves outcomes, but in randomized controlled trials nearly half of infants still died or survived with disability, showing that additional interventions are needed. There is growing evidence that brain injury spreads over time from injured to previously uninjured regions of the brain. At least in part, this spread is related to opening of connexin hemichannels and pannexin channels, both of which are large conductance membrane channels found in many brain cells. Opening of these membrane channels releases adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and other neuroactive molecules, into the extracellular space. ATP has an important role in normal signaling, but pathologically can trigger the assembly of the multi-protein inflammasome complex. The inflammasome complex promotes activation of inflammatory caspases, and release of inflammatory cytokines. Overall, the connexin hemichannel appears to play a primary role in propagation of injury and chronic disease, and connexin hemichannel blockade has been shown to be neuroprotective in multiple animal models. Thus, there is potential for some blockers of connexin or pannexin channels to be developed into targeted interventions that could be used in conjunction with or separate to therapeutic hypothermia.

20.
J Neuroinflammation ; 19(1): 139, 2022 Jun 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35690757

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Therapeutic hypothermia significantly improves outcomes after moderate-severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), but it is partially effective. Although hypothermia is consistently associated with reduced microgliosis, it is still unclear whether it normalizes microglial morphology and phenotype. METHODS: Near-term fetal sheep (n = 24) were randomized to sham control, ischemia-normothermia, or ischemia-hypothermia. Brain sections were immunohistochemically labeled to assess neurons, microglia and their interactions with neurons, astrocytes, myelination, and gitter cells (microglia with cytoplasmic lipid granules) 7 days after cerebral ischemia. Lesions were defined as areas with complete loss of cells. RNAscope® was used to assess microglial phenotype markers CD86 and CD206. RESULTS: Ischemia-normothermia was associated with severe loss of neurons and myelin (p < 0.05), with extensive lesions, astrogliosis and microgliosis with a high proportion of gitter cells (p < 0.05). Microglial wrapping of neurons was present in both the ischemia groups. Hypothermia improved neuronal survival, suppressed lesions, gitter cells and gliosis (p < 0.05), and attenuated the reduction of myelin area fraction. The "M1" marker CD86 and "M2" marker CD206 were upregulated after ischemia. Hypothermia partially suppressed CD86 in the cortex only (p < 0.05), but did not affect CD206. CONCLUSIONS: Hypothermia prevented lesions after cerebral ischemia, but only partially suppressed microglial wrapping and M1 marker expression. These data support the hypothesis that persistent upregulation of injurious microglial activity may contribute to partial neuroprotection after hypothermia, and that immunomodulation after rewarming may be an important therapeutic target.


Assuntos
Hipotermia Induzida , Hipotermia , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica , Substância Branca , Animais , Gliose/terapia , Hipóxia-Isquemia Encefálica/metabolismo , Inflamação/terapia , Isquemia , Ovinos , Substância Branca/patologia
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