Window of Opportunity of Cerebral Hypothermia for Postischemic White Matter Injury in the Near-Term Fetal Sheep

Author:

Roelfsema Vincent1,Bennet Laura1,George Sherly1,Wu David1,Guan Jian1,Veerman Marije1,Gunn Alistair Jan12

Affiliation:

1. The Liggins Institute, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

2. Department of Pediatrics and Physiology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract

Postresuscitation cerebral hypothermia is consistently neuroprotective in experimental preparations; however, its effects on white matter injury are poorly understood. Using a model of reversible cerebral ischemia in unanesthetized near-term fetal sheep, we examined the effects of cerebral hypothermia (fetal extradural temperature reduced from 39.4±0.1°C to between 30 and 33°C), induced at different times after reperfusion and continued for 72 hours after ischemia, on injury in the parasagittal white matter 5 days after ischemia. Cooling started within 90 minutes of reperfusion was associated with a significant increase in bioactive oligodendrocytes in the intragyral white matter compared with sham cooling (41±20 vs 18±11 per field, P < 0.05), increased myelin basic protein density and reduced expression of activated caspase-3 (14±12 vs 91±51, P < 0.05). Reactive microglia were profoundly suppressed compared with sham cooling (4±6 vs 38±18 per field, P < 0.05) with no effect on numbers of astrocytes. When cooling was delayed until 5.5 hours after reperfusion there was no significant effect on loss of oligodendrocytes (24±12 per field). In conclusion, hypothermia can effectively protect white matter after ischemia, but only if initiated early after the insult. Protection was closely associated with reduced expression of both activated caspase-3 and of reactive microglia.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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