A31P Nuclear Magnetic Resonancein vivoStudy of Cerebral Ischaemia in the Gerbil

Author:

Thulborn Keith R.1,du Boulay George H.2,Duchen Leo W.3,Radda George1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford, England

2. Lysholm Radiological Department, The National Hospital, London, England

3. Department of Neuropathology, The National Hospital, London, England

Abstract

We have used the noninvasive method of31phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) in vivo to follow changes in phosphorous metabolite concentrations and the intracellular pH in the right and left hemispheres and in the cerebellum of gerbil brains after the occlusion of the right carotid artery. Spatial resolution over the brain was possible using surface coils. Ligation, which is known to cause ischaemia in this species in the ipsilateral hemisphere, resulted in the diminution of phosphocreatine and adenine nucleotides and a decrease in tissue pH. Less acidification occurred in the contralateral hemisphere and in the cerebellum. The high-energy metabolite concentrations, phosphocreatine and adenosine triphosphate (ATP), declined in unison in the ischaemic region, in marked contrast to the sequence of events in skeletal muscle, in which phosphocreatine buffers against an immediate fall in ATP concentration. In a separate series of gerbils,31P NMR spectra were followed for exactly 1 h after carotid ligation. The animals were then sacrificed and brain grey matter specific gravity was rapidly measured to assess the development of oedema. There was a clear correlation between abnormality of spectra and the presence of oedema. It cannot, however, be confidently asserted that a normal spectrum is never seen in oedematous gerbil brains.31P NMR spectra specific gravity and histological changes shown by light microscopy have been correlated and show that useful signals are received from a depth of at least 4 mm or more from the 10-mm diameter coil.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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