When the air hits your brain: decreased arterial pulsatility after craniectomy leading to impaired glymphatic flow

Author:

Plog Benjamin A.12,Lou Nanhong1,Pierre Clifford A.1,Cove Alex1,Kenney H. Mark1,Hitomi Emi1,Kang Hongyi1,Iliff Jeffrey J.3,Zeppenfeld Douglas M.3,Nedergaard Maiken1,Vates G. Edward1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Translational Neuromedicine, Department of Neurosurgery, and

2. Department of Pathology, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York; and

3. Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, and Knight Cardiovascular Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon

Abstract

OBJECTIVECranial neurosurgical procedures can cause changes in brain function. There are many potential explanations, but the effect of simply opening the skull has not been addressed, except for research into syndrome of the trephined. The glymphatic circulation, by which CSF and interstitial fluid circulate through periarterial spaces, brain parenchyma, and perivenous spaces, depends on arterial pulsations to provide the driving force for bulk flow; opening the cranial cavity could dampen this force. The authors hypothesized that a craniectomy, without any other pathological insult, is sufficient to alter brain function due to reduced arterial pulsatility and decreased glymphatic flow. Furthermore, they postulated that glymphatic impairment would produce activation of astrocytes and microglia; with the reestablishment of a closed cranial compartment, the glymphatic impairment, astrocytic/microglial activation, and neurobehavioral decline caused by opening the cranial compartment might be reversed.METHODSUsing two-photon in vivo microscopy, the pulsatility index of cortical vessels was quantified through a thinned murine skull and then again after craniectomy. Glymphatic influx was determined with ex vivo fluorescence microscopy of mice 0, 14, 28, and 56 days following craniectomy or cranioplasty; brain sections were immunohistochemically labeled for GFAP and CD68. Motor and cognitive performance was quantified with rotarod and novel object recognition tests at baseline and 14, 21, and 28 days following craniectomy or cranioplasty.RESULTSPenetrating arterial pulsatility decreased significantly and bilaterally following unilateral craniectomy, producing immediate and chronic impairment of glymphatic CSF influx in the ipsilateral and contralateral brain parenchyma. Craniectomy-related glymphatic dysfunction was associated with an astrocytic and microglial inflammatory response, as well as with the development of motor and cognitive deficits. Recovery of glymphatic flow preceded reduced gliosis and return of normal neurological function, and cranioplasty accelerated this recovery.CONCLUSIONSCraniectomy causes glymphatic dysfunction, gliosis, and changes in neurological function in this murine model of syndrome of the trephined.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference94 articles.

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4. Glymphatic clearance controls state-dependent changes in brain lactate concentration;Lundgaard;J Cereb Blood Flow Metab,2017

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