Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Section of Neurosurgery, King's College, London, UK
Abstract
Peri-infarct depolarisations (PIDs) contribute to infarct expansion in experimental focal ischaemia; furthermore, depolarisations propagate in the injured human brain. Glucose utilisation is increased under both conditions, and depletion of brain glucose carries a poor prognosis. We studied dynamics of cerebral glucose and lactate in relation to PID patterns in experimental stroke. The middle cerebral artery was occluded for 3 h in 23 cats under terminal chloralose anaesthesia. We used fluorescence imaging to detect occurrence of PIDs, and rapid-sampling online microdialysis (rsMD), coupled to a flow-injection assay, to examine changes in cerebral cortical extracellular glucose and lactate at intervals of 30 sec each. After 30 min' ischaemia, lactate had increased by 43.6±s.d. 45.9 μmol/L, and stabilised in that range for 3 h. In contrast, glucose fell only slightly initially (11.9±9.7 μmol/L), but progressively decreased to a reduction of 56.7±47.2 μmol/L at 3 h, with no evidence of stabilisation. There was a highly significant inverse relationship of frequency of PIDs with plasma glucose ( P<0.001). The results also characterise a metabolic signature for PIDs for possible application in clinical work, and emphasise potential risks in the use of insulin to control plasma glucose in patients with brain injury.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology
Cited by
107 articles.
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