Stroke, Vol 16, 101-109, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
O Gotoh, T Asano, T Koide and K Takakura
The present study was undertaken to analyze the roles of brain cations and
of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to albumin in the development of ischemic
brain edema. Using the rat middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion model,
changes in the brain water, sodium, and potassium contents were followed
for a period of seven days. The permeability of the BBB to proteins was
also followed by 125I-albumin transfer from the blood into the brain. A
significant edema developed as early as three hours after MCA occlusion.
This progressed rapidly to reach a maximum on the third day, gradually
regressing thereafter. The increase in the brain water contents showed a
parallel time course to the increase in the sodium and decrease in the
potassium contents. A significant increase in the BBB permeability to
albumin occurred 72 hours after MCA occlusion. However, there was no
correlation between the brain water content and BBB permeability to albumin
in the hemispheres studied 72 hours after MCA occlusion. The correlation
between the brain water and sodium contents was not clear during the first
six hours, but became highly significant thereafter. The data suggest that
an increase in the BBB permeability to sodium occurred 12-48 hours after
MCA occlusion, which, together with an antecedent intracellular shift of
sodium, resulted in a massive influx of water and sodium into the brain.
The BBB permeability change to sodium, not to proteins, seems to play a
predominant role in the pathogenesis underlying ischemic brain edema.
ARTICLES
Ischemic brain edema following occlusion of the middle cerebral artery in the rat. I: The time courses of the brain water, sodium and potassium contents and blood-brain barrier permeability to 125I-albumin
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