Perfusion Pressure-Dependent Recovery of Cortical Spreading Depression is Independent of Tissue Oxygenation over a Wide Physiologic Range

Author:

Sukhotinsky Inna1,Yaseen Mohammad A2,Sakadžić Sava2,Ruvinskaya Svetlana2,Sims John R13,Boas David A2,Moskowitz Michael A1,Ayata Cenk13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology, Stroke and Neurovascular Regulation Laboratory, Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA

2. Department of Radiology, Photon Migration Imaging Laboratory, MGH/MIT/HMS Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, Massachusetts, USA

3. Department of Neurology, Stroke Service and Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Abstract

Spreading depression (SD) is a slowly propagating wave of transient neuronal and glial depolarization that develops after stroke, trauma and subarachnoid hemorrhage. In compromised tissue, repetitive SD-like injury depolarizations reduce tissue viability by worsening the mismatch between blood flow and metabolism. Although the mechanism remains unknown, SDs show delayed electrophysiological recovery within the ischemic penumbra. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the recovery rate of SD can be varied by modulating tissue perfusion pressure and oxygenation. Systemic blood pressure and arterial pO2 were simultaneously manipulated in anesthetized rats under full physiologic monitoring. We found that arterial hypotension doubled the SD duration, whereas hypertension reduced it by a third compared with normoxic normotensive rats. Hyperoxia failed to shorten the prolonged SD durations in hypotensive rats, despite restoring tissue pO2. Indeed, varying arterial pO2 (40 to 400 mm Hg) alone did not significantly influence SD duration, whereas blood pressure (40 to 160 mm Hg) was inversely related to SD duration in compromised tissue. These data suggest that cerebral perfusion pressure is a critical determinant of SD duration independent of tissue oxygenation over a wide range of arterial pO2 levels, and that hypotension may be detrimental in stroke and subarachnoid hemorrhage, where SD-like injury depolarizations have been observed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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