4.7 Article

Brain Hypoxia Is Associated With Neuroglial Injury in Humans Post-Cardiac Arrest

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 129, Issue 5, Pages 583-597

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.319157

Keywords

biomarker; brain injury; healthy volunteers; inflammation; partial pressure

Funding

  1. Canadian Institute of Health Research [437644]
  2. Laerdal Foundation
  3. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and Vancouver General Hospital Foundation
  4. Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute
  5. Michael Smith Foundation
  6. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research
  7. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Trainee Fellowship
  8. UBC Bluma Tischler Post-Doctoral Fellowship
  9. Darin Daniel Green Memorial Scholarship

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The study quantified the impact of secondary brain hypoxia on injury to the neurovascular unit in patients with HIBI. It was found that secondary brain hypoxia is associated with de novo neuroglial injury and cerebral release of IL-6. Mitigating cerebrovascular-to-parenchymal limitations to O-2 transport is a promising therapeutic strategy for patients with HIBI with secondary brain hypoxia.
RATIONALE: Secondary brain hypoxia portends significant mortality in ischemic brain diseases; yet, our understanding of hypoxic ischemic brain injury (HIBI) pathophysiology in humans remains rudimentary. OBJECTIVE: To quantify the impact of secondary brain hypoxia on injury to the neurovascular unit in patients with HIBI. METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted a prospective interventional study of invasive neuromonitoring in 18 post-cardiac arrest patients with HIBI. The partial pressures of brain tissue O-2 (PbtO(2)) and intracranial pressure were directly measured via intraparenchymal microcatheters. To isolate the cerebrovascular bed, we conducted paired sampling of arterial and jugular venous bulb blood and calculated the transcerebral release of biomarkers of neurovascular injury and inflammation in the patients with HIBI and 14 healthy volunteers for control comparisons. Ten patients with HIBI exhibited secondary brain hypoxia (PbtO(2)<20 mmHg), while 8 exhibited brain normoxia (PbtO(2)>= 20 mmHg). In the patients with secondary brain hypoxia, we observed active cerebral release of glial fibrillary acidic protein (-161 [-3695 to -75] pg/mL; P=0.0078), neurofilament light chain (-231 [-370 to -11] pg/mL; P=0.010), total tau (-32 [-310 to -3] pg/mL; P=0.0039), neuron-specific enolase (-14 890 [-148 813 to -3311] pg/mL; P=0.0039), and ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase L1 (-14.7 [-37.7 to -4.1] pg/mL; P=0.0059) indicating de novo neuroglial injury. This injury was unrelated to the systemic global ischemic burden or cerebral endothelial injury but rather was associated with cerebral release of IL-6 (interleukin-6; -10.3 [-43.0 to -4.2] pg/mL; P=0.0039). No cerebral release of the aforementioned biomarkers was observed in patients with HIBI with brain normoxia or the healthy volunteers. Hyperosmolar therapy in the patients with secondary brain hypoxia reduced the partial pressure of jugular venous O-2-to-PbtO(2) gradient (39.6 [34.1-51.1] versus 32.0 [24.5-39.2] mm Hg; P=0.0078) and increased PbtO(2) (17.0 [9.1-19.7] versus 20.2 [11.9-22.7] mm Hg; P=0.039) suggesting improved cerebrovascular-to-parenchymal O-2 transport. CONCLUSIONS: Secondary brain hypoxia is associated with de novo neuroglial injury and cerebral release of IL-6. Mitigating cerebrovascular-to-parenchymal limitations to O-2 transport is a promising therapeutic strategy for patients with HIBI with secondary brain hypoxia.

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