Iron Deposition in the Brain After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Author:

Galea Ian1ORCID,Durnford Andrew12,Glazier James1,Mitchell Sophie1ORCID,Kohli Suraj1ORCID,Foulkes Lesley,Norman Jeanette1,Darekar Angela3ORCID,Love Seth4ORCID,Bulters Diederik O.2ORCID,Nicoll James A.R.15,Boche Delphine1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Neurosciences, Clinical & Experimental Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, United Kingdom (I.G., A. Durnford, J.G., S.M., S.K., J.N., J.A.R.N., D.B.).

2. Wessex Neurological Centre (A. Durnford, D.O.B.), University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom.

3. Medical Physics (A. Darekar), University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom.

4. Dementia Research Group, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, United Kingdom (S.L.).

5. Department of Cellular Pathology (J.A.R.N.), University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Background: After aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), thrombus forms over the cerebral cortex and releases hemoglobin. When extracellular, hemoglobin is toxic to neurones. High local hemoglobin concentration overwhelms the clearance capacity of macrophages expressing the hemoglobin-haptoglobin scavenger receptor CD163. We hypothesized that iron is deposited in the cortex after SAH and would associate with outcome. Methods: Two complementary cross-sectional studies were conducted. Postmortem brain tissue from 39 SAH (mean postictal interval of 9 days) and 22 control cases was studied with Perls’ staining for iron and immunolabeling for CD163, ADAM17 (a disintegrin and metallopeptidase domain 17), CD68, and Iba1 (ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1). In parallel, to study the persistence of cortical iron and its relationship to clinical outcome, we conducted a susceptibility-weighted imaging study of 21 SAH patients 6 months postictus and 10 control individuals. Results: In brain tissue from patients dying soon after SAH, the distribution of iron deposition followed a gradient that diminished with distance from the brain surface. Iron was located intracellularly (mainly in macrophages, and occasionally in microglia, neurones, and glial cells) and extracellularly. Microglial activation and motility markers were increased after SAH, with a similar inward diminishing gradient. In controls, there was a positive correlation between CD163 and iron, which was lost after SAH. In SAH survivors, iron-sensitive imaging 6 months post-SAH confirmed persistence of cortical iron, related to the size and location of the blood clot immediately after SAH, and associated with cognitive outcome. Conclusions: After SAH, iron deposits in the cortical gray matter in a pattern that reflects proximity to the brain surface and thrombus and is related to cognitive outcome. These observations support therapeutic manoeuvres which prevent the permeation of hemoglobin into the cortex after SAH.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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