Selective head cooling during neonatal seizures prevents postictal cerebral vascular dysfunction without reducing epileptiform activity

Author:

Harsono Mimily1,Pourcyrous Massroor1,Jolly Elliott J.2,de Jongh Curry Amy2,Fedinec Alexander L.1,Liu Jianxiong1,Basuroy Shyamali1,Zhuang Daming1,Leffler Charles W.1,Parfenova Helena1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee; and

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee

Abstract

Epileptic seizures in neonates cause cerebrovascular injury and impairment of cerebral blood flow (CBF) regulation. In the bicuculline model of seizures in newborn pigs, we tested the hypothesis that selective head cooling prevents deleterious effects of seizures on cerebral vascular functions. Preventive or therapeutic ictal head cooling was achieved by placing two head ice packs during the preictal and/or ictal states, respectively, for the ∼2-h period of seizures. Head cooling lowered the brain and core temperatures to 25.6 ± 0.3 and 33.5 ± 0.1°C, respectively. Head cooling had no anticonvulsant effects, as it did not affect the bicuculline-evoked electroencephalogram parameters, including amplitude, duration, spectral power, and spike frequency distribution. Acute and long-term cerebral vascular effects of seizures in the normothermic and head-cooled groups were tested during the immediate (2–4 h) and delayed (48 h) postictal periods. Seizure-induced cerebral vascular injury during the immediate postictal period was detected as terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling-positive staining of cerebral arterioles and a surge of brain-derived circulating endothelial cells in peripheral blood in the normothermic group, but not in the head-cooled groups. During the delayed postictal period, endothelium-dependent cerebral vasodilator responses were greatly reduced in the normothermic group, indicating impaired CBF regulation. Preventive or therapeutic ictal head cooling mitigated the endothelial injury and greatly reduced loss of postictal cerebral vasodilator functions. Overall, head cooling during seizures is a clinically relevant approach to protecting the neonatal brain by preventing cerebrovascular injury and the loss of the endothelium-dependent control of CBF without reducing epileptiform activity.

Funder

Helena Parfenova

Helena Parfenova; hparfeno@uthsc.edu

Charles W Leffler; cleffler@uthsc.edu

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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