Abstract
Hyperglycemia severely impairs the outcome from cerebral ischemia. In order to sort out whether impaired brain ion homeostasis contributes extracellular "K+], [Ca++], and [H+] concentrations, [K+]e, [Ca++]e and [H+]e, of the brain cortex, as well as the EEG, were monitored during and after 10 minutes of complete cerebral ischemia in normo- and hyperglycemic rats. In both groups, the EEG-activity disappeared in 10-20 seconds of ischemia, at a time when [K+]e, [Ca++]e and [H+]e started to increase. After about 1.5 min, [K+]e showed an abrupt increase and [Ca++]e a steep decrease in the normoglycemic group. In the hyperglycemic group the same event took place after about 3 min of ischemia. pHe decreased to 6.6 and 6.1 in the normoglycemic and hyperglycemic group, respectively. Following the ischemic episode [K+]e reached pre-ischemic level after 4 min, [Ca++]e after 13 min, and [H+]e after 30 min in both groups. Recovery of the EEG, however, was clearly different in the 2 groups. EEG-activity reappeared later in the hyperglycemic group and showed after one hour a pattern of burst-suppression activity while the normoglycemic group showed asynchronous activity resembling the control pattern. It is concluded that high glucose content in brain prior to ischemia - and hence lower brain pH during ischemia - does not interfere with the return of normal extracellular ion composition after cerebral ischemia, whereas the return and pattern of EEG activity is severely affected.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
296 articles.
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