4.6 Article

Electrophysiological signatures of acute systemic lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation: potential implications for delirium science

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages 996-1008

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bja.2020.12.040

Keywords

cytokines; delirium; electroencephalography; functional connectivity; slow wave activity

Categories

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [R01 GM109086, R01 AG063849]
  2. Department of Anesthesiology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA

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A mouse model was used to study postoperative delirium, revealing that inflammation leads to increased cortical slow wave activity and cytokine levels, consistent with observations in patients. This suggests that prostaglandin-adenosine signaling may be associated with the occurrence of delirium.
Background: Novel preventive therapies are needed for postoperative delirium, which especially affects older patients. A mouse model is presented that captures inflammation-associated cortical slow wave activity (SWA) observed in patients, allowing exploration of the mechanistic role of prostaglandin-adenosine signalling. Methods: EEG and cortical cytokine measurements (interleukin 6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1) were obtained from adult and aged mice. Behaviour, SWA, and functional connectivity were assayed before and after systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)+piroxicam (cyclooxygenase inhibitor) or LPS+caffeine (adenosine receptor antagonist). To avoid the confounder of inflammation-driven changes in movement which alter SWA and connectivity, electrophysiological recordings were classified as occurring during quiescence or movement, and propensity score matching was used to match distributions of movement magnitude between baseline and post-LPS administration. Results: LPS produces increases in cortical cytokines and behavioural quiescence. In movement-matched data, LPS produces increases in SWA (likelihood-ratio test: chi(2)(4)=21.51, P<0.001), but not connectivity (chi(2)(4)=6.39, P=0.17). Increases in SWA associate with interleukin 6 (P<0.001) and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (P=0.001) and are suppressed by piroxicam (P<0.001) and caffeine (P=0.046). Aged animals compared with adult animals show similar LPS-induced SWA during movement, but exaggerated cytokine response and increased SWA during quiescence. Conclusions: Cytokine-SWA correlations during wakefulness are consistent with observations in patients with delirium. Absence of connectivity effects after accounting for movement changes suggests decreased connectivity in patients is a biomarker of hypoactivity. Exaggerated effects in quiescent aged animals are consistent with increased hypoactive delirium in older patients. Prostaglandin-adenosine signalling may link inflammation to neural changes and hence delirium.

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