Stroke, Vol 20, 1565-1570, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
P Mellergard, F Bengtsson, ML Smith, V Riesenfeld and BK Siesjo
Cerebral ischemia is known to be accompanied by brain edema. This increase
in brain tissue water content probably influences the final outcome of an
ischemic insult negatively. Despite extensive investigations on different
aspects of brain edema, information on edema development during the early
recirculation period following ischemia is sparse. We assessed changes in
brain water content, as reflected by changes in tissue density, during the
early recirculation period following severe forebrain ischemia. Fasted rats
were subjected to 5, 15, or 30 minutes of ischemia and 5 to 180 minutes of
recirculation. The specific gravity of specimens from the caudoputamen,
frontoparietal cortex, hippocampus, and mesencephalon were measured with a
Percoll linear density gradient. Five minutes of ischemia followed by
recirculation did not produce any significant regional brain edema.
However, following 15 minutes of ischemia, transient edema developed in the
caudoputamen, frontoparietal cortex, and hippocampus. This edema was
maximal after 30 minutes of reperfusion and was normalized after 180
minutes of reperfusion. Similar edema was seen following 30 minutes of
ischemia. In the mesencephalon (where blood flow is approximately 50% of
control during the ischemic insult) no brain edema was noted following 5,
15, or 30 minutes of ischemia. We discuss to what extent this transient
regional brain edema may influence the selective neuronal vulnerability and
cell damage observed in rats subjected to reversible forebrain ischemia and
how these findings may correlate with neurochemical alterations observed
during the early recirculation period.
ARTICLES
Time course of early brain edema following reversible forebrain ischemia in rats
Laboratory for Experimental Brain Research, University of Lund, Sweden.
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