Stroke, Vol 25, 1825-1829, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
H Uchino, J Lundgren, ML Smith and BK Siesjo
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Temperature alterations are known to influence the
outcome of transient ischemia, even when instituted in the postischemic
period. Since preischemic hyperglycemia aggravates ischemic brain damage,
the question of whether hyperglycemic animals become hyperthermic arose. To
explore this possibility, we measured body temperature telemetrically in
normoglycemic and hyperglycemic rats subjected to 10 minutes of forebrain
ischemia at a body (and brain) temperature of 37 degrees C. METHODS:
Isoflurane-anesthetized animals were subjected to 10 minutes of forebrain
ischemia under normoglycemic or hyperglycemic conditions. Temperature
changes after ischemia were measured by means of a telemetric temperature
coil. RESULTS: In normoglycemic animals, temperature decreased to 35.6 +/-
1.1 degrees C (mean +/- SD) during the first 4 hours of recovery, after
which it gradually increased to normal values (38 degrees C). Hyperglycemic
animals behaved differently in that they remained normothermic for
approximately 10 hours during recovery and later became hyperthermic, with
core temperatures rising above 39 degrees C. The rise in temperature was
not due to the osmotic load of the glucose administered because infusion of
mannitol, which gave a comparable increase in plasma osmolality, failed to
cause delayed postischemic hyperthermia. Excessive hypercapnia during
ischemia in normoglycemic animals, which produces cerebral acidosis of a
magnitude similar to that of hyperglycemia and is known to aggravate
ischemic lesions, likewise failed to induce hyperthermia. When
post-ischemic seizures ensued in hyperglycemic subjects, temperature was
39.8 +/- 0.6 degrees C. Animals with seizures invariably died. To evaluate
the influence of postischemic hyperthermia on the outcome, an additional
series of experiments was performed in which delayed hyperthermia was
avoided by gentle cooling (n = 6) or by acetaminophen administration (n =
5). Although these procedures prevented delayed hyperthermia, they neither
blocked seizure induction nor affected the fatal outcome. Postischemic
seizures developed when the core temperatures of animals were 37.9 +/- 0.1
degrees C and 37.8 +/- 0.2 degrees C in the cooled and
acetaminophen-treated groups, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The results
suggest that both delayed hyperthermia and delayed seizures in
hyperglycemic animals are caused by the aggravated damage incurred by these
animals during or immediately after the ischemic insult.
ARTICLES
Preischemic hyperglycemia leads to delayed postischemic hyperthermia
Laboratory for Experimental Brain Research, University of Lund, Sweden.
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