The kallikrein-kinin system as mediator in vasogenic brain edema

Author:

Unterberg Andreas,Dautermann Claudia,Baethmann Alexander,Müller-Esterl Werner

Abstract

✓ Evidence has previously been provided that administration of kinins to the cerebrum causes edema and opening of the blood-brain barrier. It has further been shown that these highly active compounds are formed in the brain under pathophysiological conditions. Their formation was enhanced when cerebral blood flow became compromised by an increase in intracranial pressure. Final evidence, however, was not available as to whether specific inhibition of the kallikrein-kinin (KK) system has a therapeutic function in acute head injury. The authors have demonstrated in rabbits that inhibition of the activating enzyme kallikrein by aprotinin or by aprotinin plus soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI), which interfere with plasma and tissue kallikrein, is associated with a decrease in formation of posttraumatic swelling after a standardized cold lesion to the brain. Saline-treated control animals with cerebral cold-induced injury had an increase in hemispheric weight 24 hours later of 13.0% ± 0.8% (standard error of the mean) in the damaged hemisphere compared to the contralateral nondamaged hemisphere. Administration of aprotinin or aprotinin plus SBTI led to a significant reduction of hemispheric swelling of 10.1% ± 0.7% or 10.4% ± 0.7%, respectively. In animals receiving SBTI only, hemispheric swelling evolving from cold injury was not significantly reduced. Therapeutic reduction of brain edema by aprotinin cannot be attributed to a nonspecific effect on the blood pressure, which in the experimental groups remained almost normal as compared to the control animals. Failure of SBTI to influence posttraumatic brain swelling may have resulted from disturbances in intravascular coagulation. Measurements of aprotinin in plasma and tissue demonstrate that the inhibitor doses employed are within an effective therapeutic range. Attenuation of brain edema by specific inhibition of the KK system provides evidence for a mediator role of kinins in vasogenic edema. Clinical trials with inhibitors of the KK system in acute forms of traumatic lesions associated with vasogenic edema appear worthwhile.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

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