The Contribution of Reoxygenation to Ischemic Brain Damage

1991 
This study examined the hypothesis that the level of postischemic reperfusion affects the severity of the resulting neuronal necrosis. In rats, tissue Po2% was monitored as an index of flow (reoxygenation) at four cortical sites by chronically implanted platinum electrodes. Twenty minutes of total global cerebral ischemia was followed by 30 min of reoxygenation. The level of reoxygenation was controlled to maintain the Po2 nearly constant at one or more of the cortical electrodes. Tissue from within 400 μm of each of 19 electrode sites among seven rats was evaluated histologically. There was a positive correlation between reoxygenation level and severity of neuronal damage. Perineuronal lucent halo formation, probably representing astrocyte foot process swelling, was negatively correlated with reoxygenation level. This study demonstrates that ischemic neuronal damage was aggravated by increased reoxygenation but that perineuronal swelling, as evidenced by halo formation, was somewhat ameliorated.
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