Magnetic resonance imaging monitored acute blood-brain barrier changes in experimental traumatic brain injury

被引:164
|
作者
Barzo, P
Marmarou, A
Fatouros, P
Corwin, F
Dunbar, J
机构
[1] VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIV MED COLL VIRGINIA, DIV NEUROSURG, RICHMOND, VA 23298 USA
[2] VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIV MED COLL VIRGINIA, DEPT RADIOL, RICHMOND, VA 23298 USA
关键词
blood-brain barrier; magnetic resonance imaging; traumatic brain injury; gadolinium; secondary insult;
D O I
10.3171/jns.1996.85.6.1113
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The authors posit that cellular edema is the major contributor to brain swelling in diffuse head injury and that the contribution of vasogenic edema may be overemphasized. The objective of this study was to determine the early time course of blood-brain barrier (BBB) changes in diffuse closed head injury and to what extent barrier permeability is affected by the secondary insults of hypoxia and hypotension. The BBB disruption was quantified and visualized using T-1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging following intravenous administration of the MR contrast agent gadolinium-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid. To avoid the effect of blood volume changes, the maximum signal intensity (SI) enhancement was used to calculate the difference in BBB disruption. A new impact-acceleration model was used to induce closed head injury. Forty-five adult Sprague-Dawley rats were separated into four groups: Group T, sham operated (four animals), Group II, hypoxia and hypotension (four animals), Group III, trauma only (23 animals), and Group IV, trauma coupled with hypoxia and hypotension (14 animals). After trauma was induced, a 30-minute insult of hypoxia (PaO2 40 mm Hg) and hypotension (mean arterial blood pressure sure 30 mm Hg) was imposed, after which the animals were resuscitated. In the trauma-induced animals, the SI increased dramatically immediately after impact. By 15 minutes permeability decreased exponentially and by 30 minutes it was equal to that of control animals. When trauma was coupled with secondary insult, the SI enhancement was lower after the trauma, consistent with reduced blood pressure and blood flow. However, the SI increased dramatically on reperfusion and was equal to that of control by 60 minutes after the combined insult. In conclusion, the authors suggest that closed head injury is associated with a rapid and transient BBB opening that begins at the time of the trauma and lasts no more than 30 minutes. It has also been shown that addition of posttraumatic secondary insult-hypoxia and hypotension-prolongs the time of BBB breakdown after closed head injury. The authors further conclude that MR imaging is an excellent technique to follow (time resolution 1-1.5 minutes) the evolution of trauma-induced BBB damage noninvasively from as early as a few minutes up to hours or even longer after the trauma occurs.
引用
收藏
页码:1113 / 1121
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Blood-Brain Barrier and Traumatic Brain Injury
    Alves, Jose Luis
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2014, 92 (02) : 141 - 147
  • [2] IMAGING BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER DYSFUNCTION AS A BIOMARKER FOR TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    Milikovsky, D. Z.
    Rosenbach, D.
    Weissberg, I.
    Elazari, N.
    Lublinsky, S.
    Kamintsky, L.
    Friedman, A.
    JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM, 2016, 36 : 263 - 264
  • [3] Meningeal blood-brain barrier disruption in acute traumatic brain injury
    Turtzo, Lisa Christine
    Jikaria, Neekita
    Cota, Martin R.
    Williford, Joshua P.
    Uche, Victoria
    Davis, Tara
    MacLaren, Judy
    Moses, Anita D.
    Parikh, Gunjan
    Castro, Marcelo A.
    Pham, Dzung L.
    Butman, John A.
    Latour, Lawrence L.
    BRAIN COMMUNICATIONS, 2020, 2 (02)
  • [4] A Quantitative MRI Method for Imaging Blood-Brain Barrier Leakage in Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury
    Li, Wei
    Long, Justin Alexander
    Watts, Lora Talley
    Jiang, Zhao
    Shen, Qiang
    Li, Yunxia
    Duong, Timothy Q.
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (12):
  • [5] Magnetic Resonance Imaging Profile of Blood-Brain Barrier Injury in Patients With Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage
    Aksoy, Didem
    Bammer, Roland
    Mlynash, Michael
    Venkatasubramanian, Chitra
    Eyngorn, Irina
    Snider, Ryan W.
    Gupta, Sandeep N.
    Narayana, Rashmi
    Fischbein, Nancy
    Wijman, Christine A. C.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, 2013, 2 (03):
  • [6] Blood-Brain Barrier Pathophysiology in Traumatic Brain Injury
    Chodobski, Adam
    Zink, Brian J.
    Szmydynger-Chodobska, Joanna
    TRANSLATIONAL STROKE RESEARCH, 2011, 2 (04) : 492 - 516
  • [7] Application of Delayed Contrast Extravasation Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Depicting Subtle Blood-Brain Barrier Disruption in a Traumatic Brain Injury Model
    Zaltsman, Sigal Liraz
    Sharabi, Shirley
    Guez, David
    Daniels, Diann
    Cooper, Itzik
    Shemesh, Chen
    Atrakchi, Dana
    Ravid, Orly
    Omesi, Liora
    Rand, Daniel
    Livny, Abigail
    Beeri, Michal Schnaider
    Friedman-Levi, Yael
    Shohami, Esther
    Mardor, Yael
    Last, David
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2024, 41 (3-4) : 430 - 446
  • [8] Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Blood-Brain Barrier permeability in Dementia
    Chagnot, Audrey
    Barnes, Samuel R.
    Montagne, Axel
    NEUROSCIENCE, 2021, 474 : 14 - 29
  • [9] Blood-brain barrier permeability following traumatic brain injury
    M Jungner
    P Bentzer
    Critical Care, 16 (Suppl 1):
  • [10] The Blood-Brain Barrier as a Target in Traumatic Brain Injury Treatment
    Thal, Serge C.
    Neuhaus, Winfried
    ARCHIVES OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2014, 45 (08) : 698 - 710