Stroke, Vol 23, 1349-1354, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
T Kuroiwa, P Bonnekoh and KA Hossmann
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Local differences in the hemodynamic response to
transient ischemia could be involved in the development of selective
vulnerability. These differences were studied in vulnerable and
nonvulnerable regions of the brain. METHODS: Five gerbils were subjected to
10 minutes of bilateral forebrain ischemia, and cerebral blood flow was
measured continuously in the frontal cortex and CA1 sector of the
hippocampus using laser Doppler flowmetry. Carotid artery pressure was
recorded simultaneously with a pressure transducer. RESULTS: After
induction of ischemia, blood flow in the cortex and CA1 sector decreased to
11.8% and 18.0% of the baseline value, respectively. After release of the
vascular occlusion, blood flow in the cortex returned to the preischemic
level at 7.5 minutes (recovery time), reached the hyperemic peak (123.8%)
at 12.4 minutes (peak latency), and again decreased to the preischemic
level at 27.2 minutes. In the CA1 sector, blood flow returned to the
preischemic level at 2.1 minutes, reached the hyperemic peak (122.2%) at
5.7 minutes, and decreased again to the preischemic level at 21.3 minutes.
In both the cortex and CA1 sector, recovery time and peak latency
correlated inversely with the amount of residual blood flow during
ischemia. Histologically, cortical neurons were not injured but only 14.6%
of CA1 neurons survived 1 week after ischemia. CONCLUSIONS: CA1 neurons
were selectively injured despite the milder percentage decrease of blood
flow during ischemia and the more prompt recovery of flow after ischemia.
These findings stress the importance of intrinsic rather than hemodynamic
factors in the pathogenesis of selective vulnerability of CA1 neurons after
transient bilateral forebrain ischemia.
ARTICLES
Laser doppler flowmetry in CA1 sector of hippocampus and cortex after transient forebrain ischemia in gerbils
Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research, Department of Experimental Neurology, Cologne, FRG.
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