4.6 Article

Depth-profile of impairments in endothelin-1-induced focal cortical ischemia

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM
Volume 42, Issue 10, Pages 1944-1960

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0271678X221107422

Keywords

DC-recordings; endothelin; ischemia; somatosensory cortex; spreading depolarization

Funding

  1. RSF [22-15-00236]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG DR 323/5-1, DFG DR 323/10-1]
  3. Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung [BMBF 01EW2004]
  4. [0671-2020-0059]

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The study investigates the development of ischemic lesions in the cortical depths using direct current coupled recordings in the rat barrel cortex. The results show that the lesions progress from the surface to the cortical depth and early changes in electrical activity can predict the severity of damage.
The development of ischemic lesions has primarily been studied in horizontal cortical space. However, how ischemic lesions develop through the cortical depth remains largely unknown. We explored this question using direct current coupled recordings at different cortical depths using linear arrays of iridium electrodes in the focal epipial endothelin-1 (ET1) ischemia model in the rat barrel cortex. ET1-induced impairments were characterized by a vertical gradient with (i) rapid suppression of the spontaneous activity in the superficial cortical layers at the onset of ischemia, (ii) compartmentalization of spreading depolarizations (SDs) to the deep layers during progression of ischemia, and (iii) deeper suppression of activity and larger histological lesion size in superficial cortical layers. The level of impairments correlated strongly with the rate of spontaneous activity suppression, the rate of SD onset after ET1 application, and the amplitude of giant negative ultraslow potentials (similar to-70 mV), which developed during ET1 application and were similar to the tent-shaped ultraslow potentials observed during focal ischemia in the human cortex. Thus, in the epipial ET1 ischemia model, ischemic lesions develop progressively from the surface to the cortical depth, and early changes in electrical activity at the onset of ET1-induced ischemia reliably predict the severity of ischemic damage.

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