4.5 Article

Characteristics of sustained blood-brain barrier opening and tissue injury in a model for focal trauma in the rat

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 83-92

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/089771501750055794

Keywords

blood-brain barrier; brain edema; brain trauma; intracranial hemorrhage

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Minor stab wounding of rodent brain by needle or razor blade is a standard model for immunohistochemical investigations of secondary neuronal degeneration and scarring. Opening of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to plasma molecules and inflammatory cells is integral to the secondary injury process. To facilitate quantitative study of these BBB phenomena, we tested the utility of a stereotaxic wire knife as a minimally invasive way for modeling of focal trauma and bleeding in brain parenchyma and substantial, reproducible BBB damage. Adult rats were anesthetized, and through a skull burr hole, the 0.3-mm dia guide cannula housing a laterally extendable tungsten wire (0.13 mm dia) was inserted into the right striatum. A layering of horizontal disk-like cuts (3 mm dia) was made, producing a cylindrical lesion of similar to 18 mm(3) volume, similar to2.7% of the cerebral hemisphere. Transfer constants (K-i) for blood to brain permeation of [H-3]sucrose measured from 30 min to 2 weeks postlesion showed sustained BBB leakiness; for example, mean K-i +/- SEM (nL.g(-1).s(-1)) for a standard, matrix-dissected forebrain sample enclosing the lesion were 7.2 +/- 1.2 (day 1 postlesion), 8.1 +/- 1.4 (day 3), 5.4 +/- 0.8 (day 14) compared with values for contralateral nonlesioned forebrain ranging from 1.3 +/- 0.05 to 1.6 +/- 0.3 (n = 3-4 samples per time point). Analysis of the simultaneous transport of [C-14]sucrose (MW = 342 Da) and [H-3]inulin (MW similar to5,000) showed significantly larger upward increments in K-i for sucrose than inulin, indicating a pore-like opening mechanism. Significant edema was measured 3 days postlesion. A reactive glial response was indicated by an increase in S100 beta by 6 h and a glial scar forming around the lesion by 7 days. Secondary brain injury was indicated by a 10% loss of hemisphere mass, measured at 2 months. The wire knife enabled tailoring of interstitial trauma with a minimum of extraneous injury and supported reproducible measurements of sustained BBB injury using relatively few animals.

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