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Stroke. 2006;37:2445
Published online before print September 7, 2006, doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000244060.83388.76
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(Stroke. 2006;37:2445.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorials

Intracerebral Hematoma

Beyond the Mass Lesion

Raymond A. Swanson, MD

From the Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco, and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, Calif.

Correspondence to Raymond A. Swanson, Department of Neurology, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 4150 Clement St, San Francisco, CA 94121. E-mail raymond.swanson{at}va.gov


Key Words: intracranial hemorrhage • mitochondria

See related article, pages 2457–2462.

The signs and symptoms of acute intracranial hemorrhage are those of a rapidly developing mass lesion, compounded over time by surrounding edema, and sometimes by brain herniation. These are dramatic, debilitating, and often fatal events, but does the pathophysiology of intracranial hemorrhage extend beyond that of mass effect? Blood contains several factors that are potentially, and in some cases definitively, neurotoxic. Chief among these are hemoglobin and its breakdown products, heme and iron, which exhibit neurotoxicity at low micromolar concentrations through mechanisms involving iron-catalyzed production of reactive oxygen species.1,2 Brain has a variety of defense mechanisms to prevent the formation of reactive iron from blood hemoglobin, including inducible and constitutive heme oxygenases and iron-binding proteins,3 but these are easily overwhelmed by frank hemorrhage.4 Indirect evidence for hematoma toxicity on surrounding brain has come from studies showing reduced extraction of blood oxygen by perihematoma brain tissue.5 Given that heme and iron are potent mitochondrial toxins, one explanation for reduced oxygen extraction in the vicinity of a brain hematoma is a reduced capacity for oxygen use by mitochondria in this region.

The study by Kim-Han et al6 provides additional support for this idea. This study measured rates of oxygen use by mitochondria isolated from the margins of intracerebral hematomas in 6 human subjects. These measurements revealed a roughly 40% reduction in state 3 respiration and 3-fold increase in state 4 respiration in perihematoma samples, relative to putatively normal mitochondria taken from epilepsy surgery sites. State 3 respiration is a measure of oxygen use during production of ATP from ADP, and thus approximates mitochondrial function under normal conditions in situ. State 4 respiration is a measure of oxygen consumption in the absence of ADP substrate, and hence provides a measure of the "leakiness" of mitochondrial membranes, which increases with mitochondrial damage.

Although neither of these measures alone reached a P value of 0.05, the use of tissue from human surgical resections unavoidably introduces variability into the study. The patients were of differing ages and with differing underlying diseases. Mitochondria were taken from several different brain regions, with variable ratios of neuronal and non-neuronal mitochondria. Large changes in neuronal mitochondria may be masked by smaller changes in more resilient glial cells, or by the extended time interval between resection and respiration measurements. All of these factors tend to introduce "noise" into the results, but the key question, not definitively addressed by these studies, is whether the observed mitochondrial dysfunction is attributable primarily to local trauma and mass effect, or is in fact attributable to diffusible factors from the hematoma. The findings by Kim-Han et al set the stage for future work in which interventions that target mitochondrial damage can be assessed to more clearly delineate the cause-effect relationships suggested by this work.

Acknowledgments

Disclosures

None.

Footnotes

The opinions in this editorial are not necessarily those of the editors or of the American Heart Association.

References

  1. Goldstein L, Teng ZP, Zeserson E, Patel M, Regan RF. Hemin induces an iron-dependent, oxidative injury to human neuron-like cells. J Neurosci Res. 2003; 73: 113–121.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  2. Regan RF, Panter SS. Hemoglobin potentiates excitotoxic injury in cortical cell culture. J Neurotrauma. 1996; 13: 223–231.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  3. Wagner KR, Sharp FR, Ardizzone TD, Lu A, Clark JF. Heme and iron metabolism: role in cerebral hemorrhage. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2003; 23: 629–652.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  4. Keep RF, Xi G, Hua Y, Hoff JT. The deleterious or beneficial effects of different agents in intracerebral hemorrhage: think big, think small, or is hematoma size important? Stroke. 2005; 36: 1594–1596.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Zazulia AR, Diringer MN, Videen TO, Adams RE, Yundt K, Aiyagari V, Grubb RL Jr, Powers WJ. Hypoperfusion without ischemia surrounding acute intracerebral hemorrhage. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2001; 21: 804–810.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  6. Kim-Han JS, Kopp SA, Dugan LL, Diringer MN. Perihematomal mitochondrial dysfunction following intracerebral hemorrhage. Stroke. 2006; 37: 2457–2462.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Related Article:

Perihematomal Mitochondrial Dysfunction After Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Jeong Sook Kim-Han, Sarah J. Kopp, Laura L. Dugan, and Michael N. Diringer
Stroke 2006 37: 2457-2462. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




This Article
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