INTRODUCTION Studies of the mechanisms relating blood supply to the brain appeared to be, in some sense, at a deadlock...
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INTRODUCTION Studies of the mechanisms relating blood supply to the brain appeared to be, in some sense, at a deadlock. Despite extensive application of different methodical approaches, no qualitative progress has been observed in these studies at the present time. This is perhaps due to the traditional, but not understandable, separation of neurophysiological and "circulatory" studies. It may seem very paradoxical, but the study of cerebral blood circulation proceeds almost in complete isolation from the knowledge about brain functions and does not take into account the specificity of the working brain as a part of the whole body. It is well known that the brain belongs to the group of organs having a high level of oxygen consumption. According to the data of Artru et al., (1980), oxygen consumption by the brain is an average 4.6 ml per 100 g of tissue per minute. In humans, the level of oxygen consumption by the whole brain attains 46 ml/min (Wade, Bishop, 1962). This makes up approximately 20% of the total oxygen volume consumed by the organism. Consequently, the cerebral tissue is characterized by highly energetic processes. There is evidence indicating that even in functionally resting conditions, 18% of the entire energy expenditure of the body is utilized by the brain (Kinney et al., 1963). Calculations made by Rushmer indicate that the intensity of energy consumption by the human brain appears to be on average 20 Watt (Rushmer, 1981). The data described above account for the major particularity of the cerebral vascular system, for its high functional significance in the metabolic maintenance of the brain functions, and, consequently, for a high reliability of functioning of the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of brain blood supply during a permanent existence of the external and internal disturbing influences of different natures. The history of investigations of these mechanisms is full of dramatic collisions. In the nineteenth century Theodor Meynert (1867-1868), while studying the morphological differentiation of individual structures of the cortex, put forth a hypothesis on partial hyperemia in these areas as an indication of their partial awaking. "The ...same search for the physical basis of mental activity made Hans Berger, one generation later, investigate blood flow (Berger, 1901) and heat production (Berger, 1910) of the `resting' and `working' brain. But he left this line after he had discovered, in the early 1920's, that the electrical potential which could be recorded from the cerebral cortex could be related to restfulness
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(regular 10/sec alpha-waves) and mental activity (predominant beta-activity) (Berger, 1938)..." (Creutzfeldt, 1975, p.21). This put off for a whole century the investigation in the direction of Meynert's hypothesis. Correlation of specific changes in the brain's electrical activity with behavior initiated a new trend in brain studies. It appeared that the cerebral cortex responds by desynchronization to orientation reaction, attention, goal-directed behavior, mental activity, stress, etc., but responds with synchronization to a resting state, lack of attention, inactivation of cerebration, etc. However, great difficulties were faced, trying to correlate the observed electrical event with the functional anatomy of the brain. The degree of complexity of the task to be solved could by no means be co-measured with the degree of changes seen in the EEG. That is why interest in Berger's discoveries eventually has waned while interest in Meynert's idea has increased. Moreover, following Berger's theory instead of Meynert's, researchers lost the brilliant chance of joining the neurophysiological and circulatory investigations for approximately one century. Which theories did investigators of cerebral blood circulation follow in the meantime? In 1890 Roy and Sherrington in their classic work "On the Regulation of the Blood Supply of the Brain" put forth a view that the cerebral blood flow (CBF) value was determined by two factors: a) systemic arterial pressure (SAP) and b) intrinsic mechanisms based on the action of metabolic products and capable of modulating the degree of blood supply of the brain in terms of changes occurring in its functional activity. Six years later, Hill (1896) categorically rejected the possibility of existence in the brain's vascular system of intrinsic regulatory mechanisms and advanced a postulate on the CBF's passive dependence upon SAP changes. This point of view was not refuted until the 1930's. However, since that time an increasing number of evidence has been accumulated indicating the active involvement of the cerebral vessels in the regulation of its blood supply. In 1934 Fog employing "cranial window" method which permits the direct measurement of the pial vessel diameter, demonstrated convincingly that the feline pial arteries constricted when SAP increased. This observation, corroborated in his subsequent studies (Fog, 1938, 1939), prompted him to resort to the concept of intrinsic regulation of CBF which he considered was based on the spontaneous reactions of vessels to changes in transmural pressure. With the development of new methods for CBF measurement, more direct and indirect evidence (both experimental and clinical) accumulated providing support for Fog's conclusion. The most essential qualitative leap in studies of the regulation of cerebral blood circulation followed the appearance of Kety and Schmidt's method in 1948 which made it possible to perform quantitative measurements of CBF. Thanks to a successful application of this method, Lassen in 1959 definitely confirmed that the vascular system of the brain appears to be autonomic and self-regulating. Here is a short description of the structural-anatomical organization of this system. The brain of humans and animals is supplied with blood by a system of parallel major arteries comprised of two internal carotid and two vertebral arteries. The degree of involvement of these arteries varies in different human and animal species (Klosovski, 1951; Gannushkina et
Introduction
3
al., 1977). The internal carotid arteries branching off from the common carotid pass in most animals and in humans through the cavernous sinus and reach the brain base outside the visual chiasma. The vertebral arteries by-passing the medulla oblongata are unified and form the basilar artery. Characteristic of all representatives of the feline, artiodactyla, and cetacean orders, is a poor development of the vertebrate arteries, a reduction of the internal carotids, and the presence of so-called rete mirabile in the cranial base (Yakovleva, 1948; Gannushkina et al., 1977). It is supposed also, that there is an analog of the rete mirabile in human in the form of tiny anastomoses binding the branches of the external and internal carotid arteries (Gillian, 1974). Functional implications of the rete mirabile remain still obscure. It is thought to be involved in the dampening of pulse oscillations, in thermal exchange, and in neurohumoral regulation of cerebral blood circulation. From the rete mirabile there originate vessels which are referred to as the cerebral carotid arteries (Akaevskii, 1975). At the brain base, the major arteries and their branches form an anastomising ring, the circle of Willis. Here, like to a common collector, blood is delivered from the internal carotids and vertebral arteries, which play an exclusively important role in the formation of collateral blood flow in the case of pathology in any major artery. From the circle of Willis originate the anterior, medial, and posterior cerebral arteries, which, by ramifying extensively on the brain surface, form the anastomising network of the pial arteries. The degree of density of the latter depends on the degree of evolvement of the animal. Compared to the system of the carotid arteries, the vascular reservoir of the vertebral arteries is thought to be organized in a more complex way. From the pial arteries originate the intracerebral arteries, which penetrate brain tissue and, by ramifying therein form a continuous capillary network. The higher the density of such a network is, the more intensive is the metabolism of the given brain region (Scarrer, 1940, 1944). As distinct as the major and pial arteries are, the intracerebral arteries are not associated with each other by anastomoses (Klosovski, 1951). In contrast to other organs, the capillaries are believed to be a single communication between the arteries and veins of the brain, and there are no arteriovenous anastomoses (Schneider, 1953; Kiss, Tarjan, 1959; Rowbotham, Little, 1965; Kennedy, Taplin, 1967; Ponte, Purves, 1974; Hasegawa, Ravens, Toole, 1976; Marcus et al., 1976; Tada, 1978). Outflow of venous blood from the capillaries occurs, on the one hand, along the pial veins located on the brain surface, and on the other hand, along the deep veins running from the subcortial ganglia and vascular plexuses in the thick layer of brain tissue. From the pial veins blood is delivered to the venous sinuses, and then to the jugular veins. The deep veins uniting form the large Hallen's vein which also enters the venous sinuses of the brain. In spite of intensive study of the role and contribution of the vascular regions mentioned above in the regulation of cerebral blood circulation, there is no universal view yet concerning this question. That is not surprising as wonder a detailed study of the finite parameter of the regulation of local CBF was not started until the 1960's. Since that time, investigations became more complex and started developing in three basic directions: 1. The study of the hemodynamic aspect proper of cerebral blood flow regulation, functioning of its mechanisms and executive links. 2. The study of the correlation of the blood supply of individual brain structures and regions with metabolism and the level of functional activity
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and 3. The use of local CBF dynamics as a neurophysiological test for determining the extent of involvement of various brain structures in the organization of a complex functional act. According to the viewpoints contained in the work by Moskalenko, Orlov and Beketov (1988) one may speak about the structural, functional, systemic and comparativephysiological approaches to study the problem of cerebral blood circulation. The first, the structural, provides for the analysis of the texture of the cerebral vascular system, the second, the functional, gives the processes observed in this system during a variety of influences, the third, the systemic, synthesizes the experimental data by using the theory of control and regulation, while the last one generalizes the rest of the approaches in a comparativephysiological manner. The most indisputable data have been obtained from the structural approach, but its potential is unfortunately finite (in view of the boundaries of the cerebral vascular system itself) and is limited, because on the basis of data obtained by using the structural approach, it is impossible to conceive what the functioning of the CBF regulatory system is. The largest body of evidence, and the most conflicting was gathered by using a functional approach. Its possibilities appear to be as infinite as the number of putative influences (simple and compound) on the cerebral circulatory system. Its approach observes the processes in the cerebral vascular system, during different influence on the system. This method served as an impetus for the development of a wide variety of methods giving an objective recording in a definite time interval. In view of the controversy of data obtained by using this approach in a complex situation, it appears to be a systemic approach to derive material from the results of a functional approach. As far as the comparative-physiological approach is concerned, it inevitably sums up all the errors, the outcome of the pitfalls and limitations of the other approaches. The overwhelming majority of studies devoted to displaying the CBF regulation mechanism are based on obtaining static characteristics of the regulating system. As a rule, only the steady state value of the parameter, which in each particular case is utilized for the evaluation of the process of regulation (be it CBF, for example, or the value of the vascular lumen) is recorded and analyzed. This approach is extremely important for the establishment of the final results of the process of regulation, but it furnishes nothing concerning the dynamics of this process. In terms of the theory of automatic regulation and control, it is well known that it is principally impossible to describe the functioning of the regulating system on the basis of only static characteristics. It is also required to obtain the so-called dynamic characteristics yielding a description of transient processes. It is known that at the exposure of the system's input to a disturbing influence, the parameter to be regulated does not immediately come to its new level, but comes only after the lapse of a certain time interval. The processes developing in the regulating system from the moment of application of the influence until the establishment of a new steady state are termed transient. They, as a matter of fact, throw light on the principles by which the regulating mechanisms function. To obtain the indicated characteristics is the most typical task of an expert in the theory of automatic control and regulation, and the methods to solve this are sufficiently and strictly defined (especially for linear systems). Unfortunately, physiologists often unaware of the basic principles of this theory (though for this purpose there are classical books by Grodinz (1966) and by Milsum (1968), about the analysis of this or another process of regulation), employ a
Introduction
5
priori an incorrect methodical approach. Naturally, a complex, living system exceeds the most complex technical devices, but that is an extra argument in favour of the necessity to use a more adequate tool for analysis. There are, we think, major reasons which give rise to a large number of controversial experimental data on CBF regulation, and they, to a considerable extent, lead to discussions about the nature of the mechanism or mechanisms underlying it. What are the most valid, or at least thought to be such to-date, experimental facts by which current viewpoints are formulated on cardinal issues in the field of the physiology of cerebral blood circulation? 1. Cerebrovascular smooth muscles have characteristics which differ from those of other organs (Bevan et al., 1982). 2. There is relative steadiness of the total CBF during alteration (within certain limits) of systemic arterial pressure (SAP) (the so-called "autoregulation" of blood supply to the brain (Lassen, 1959; Rapella, Green, 1964; Harper, 1966; Hagendal, Johamsson, 1968; Ekstrom-Jodal et al., 1970; Smith et al., 1970). 3. Blood supply also varies during variation of the brain structures functional activity (Antoshkina, Naumenko, 1960; Ingvar, 1961; Ingvar et al., 1962; Benua, Lesnjak, 1967a,b; Baldey-Moulinier, Ingvar, 1968; Freeman,Ingvar, 1968; Klosovski, Kosmarskaja, 1969; Meyer, Gotoh, 1969; Reivich et al., 1969; Risberg, Ingvar, 1971; Bicher et al., 1973; Moskalemko et al., 1075; Leniger-Follert, Lubbers, 1976; Demchenko, 1983; Mitagvaria, 1983). 4. In smooth muscles of the brain vessels, there is both electromechanic and pharmacomechanic coupling of influences with active reactions (Hirsh, Korner, 1964; Kogure et al., 1970; Orlov et al., 1971; Edvinsson et al., 1975; Gabrieljan, 1976; Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1978; Tada, 1978; Balueva et al., 1980; Bevan et al., 1982). 5. Cerebral vessels are well innervated with adrenergic and cholinergic nerve fibers (Nielsen, Owman, 1967; Edvinsson, 1975; Motavkin, Markina-Palashchenko, Bojko, 1981) whose specific receptors are distributed along the cerebrovascular bed (Edvinsson, McKenzie, 1977). These are the most reliable findings that served as a basis for building up various theories about the regulation of the cerebral blood supply. For example, the finding about the augmentation of bioelectric spike activity of the smooth muscle vessels during stretch and deformation is a vigorous basis for the theory of myogenic regulation of vascular tone and appears to be an impetus for the development of its idea. No less an intriguing finding is also the pharmacological mechanism of the smooth muscle activation nourishing the development of the idea of both neurogenic and metabolic theories about the regulation of the cerebral blood supply. However, the utmost attention of investigators was attracted by the finding concerning abundant innervation of cerebral vessels up to arteriols 15-20 mcm in diameter which served as a basis for the emergence and development of an idea about the neurogenic mechanisms of the regulation of the cerebral blood circulation, but has not been properly explained so far.
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At any rate, debate between adherents of various points of views concerning the role of each of the mechanisms indicated above in the regulation of the brain blood supply has not been terminated over the decades, though at present, it has been going on possibly qualitatively on a level different from earlier ones. The present treatise is an attempt to furnish fundamental findings reported in the literature and the results of our own investigations relative to the problem of the mechanisms of the regulation of cerebral blood circulation and the physiological and morhological effects of local hyperthermia undertaken for recent years in the Department of Regulatory Mechanisms of Metabolic Maintenance of Brain Functions at the I.Beritashvili Institute of Physiology, Georgian Academy of Sciences (Tbilisi, Georgia) and in the Valley Cancer Institute (Los Angeles, California. USA). It deals with the question of the regulation of local CBF during the most essential external and internal disturbing influences, such as: the variation of systemic arterial pressure (SAP), oxygen insufficiency, the alteration of metabolic demands of brain tissue, and the influence of a hyperthermia factor, induced by microwave radiation (employed, in particular, in oncological clinics). In the treatise several hypotheses are put forth; their critical evaluation by experts in the field will be gratefully acknowledged. The present work could not have been undertaken and the treatise written without everyday efforts and a great deal of our co-workers. Among them (from the Beritashvili Institute of Physiology, Tbilisi, Georgia): Drs - T.Adamia, V.Begiashvili, M.Devdariani, L.Gobechia, L.Gumberidze, G.Kvrivishvili, V.Meladze, M.Nebieridze, and L.Nicolaishvili (from the Valley Cancer Institute, Los Anjeles, CA): Drs - Ralph Woolfstein, Silvia Carter, Carlos Caridad, Duane Brulley, Roxana Dan. Included in the book are also the results of studies pursued by one of the author in the Max Planck Institute of Physiological Systems together with Professor D.Lubbers and Professor E.Leniger-Follert (Dortmund, Germany). We wish to express our sincere gratitude to all of them. Our special thanks are due to Miss Ninel Skhirtladze for the translation of the several parts of the book into English. The authors also give their special appreciation to Dr. Betty Ciuchta for the many hours devoted to the editing and organization of this book.
SECTION 1: REGULATION OF LOCAL CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW DURING SYSTEMIC ARTERIAL PRESSURE CHANGES
Chapter I
SOME THEORETICAL PREREQUISITES 1.1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Over a hundred years ago A.A.Ostroumoff (1876) determined an indirect way (according to temperature variation) of blood flow measurement through the skin of a dog's extremities and found that during the elevation of the systemic arterial blood pressure (by stimulating the peripheral end of the celiac nerve) the blood flow value does not increase in the normal nor in the denervated limb. Because this could be due only to the vessel's constrictory response to the intravascular pressure elevation, Ostroumoff postulated that the vascular walls possess the capacity to react actively to an abrupt rise in blood pressure by increasing their tension. Though analogous observation had been made even earlier (Ludwig, Schmidt, 1869), it was since the work of Ostroumoff that the study of this problem was pursued, a problem which has acquired a paramount importance for the interpretation of the questions dealing with the genesis, alteration and regulation of vascular tone in general. The problem in question deals with the physiological mechanisms, underlying the vascular responses, providing a relatively steady organ blood flow during arterial pressure level changes. Some 25 years later since the investigations of Ostroumoff, same problem was addressed in 1902 by Bayliss who, by the use of the plethysmographic method, showed the vascular constriction during a rise in blood pressure (either by way of short-lasting asphyxia or by stimulation of the celiac nerve) and their dilation rises during a fall of the intravascular pressure achieved by the occlusion of the abdominal aorta. This reaction of vessels to the intravascular pressure changes has been termed "the Ostroumoff-Bayliss phenomenon." However, the question of the significance of vascular reactions to stretching remained for a long time in the dark because of the predominance at that time of the theory of that vascular tone depended exclusively upon impulses from the vasoconstricting nerves, a theory that compelled physiologists to consider this reaction merely as a striking manifestation of the general features of muscular tone, but not so important as the role of the nervous regulation of the vascular tone. Therefore, before the early 1940's the number of investigations concerned with the Ostroumoff-Bayliss phenomenon appeared to be relatively negligible. Among them one can single out works where some first conjectures were made on the nature
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of vascular responses to the intravascular pressure changes, works whose topic still remains a subject to discussion (Anrep, 1912; Bayliss, 1923; Fog, 1937, 1938, 1939). When the existence of the peripheral tone of vessels and its significance were firmly established, then the next stage in the development of the physiology of blood circulation studied the problem of dealing with the regulation of the blood flow to the organs. Therefore, the major trends in studying the significance of intravascular pressure changes were the investigations made in various regional beds of the system of blood circulation. A considerable majority of studies on the effect of intravascular pressure upon the vascular tone was then based on the comparison of the pressure levels with the blood flow values in individual vascular areas. This was just the same method of investigation led by Ostroumoff and Bayliss as well, but in order to study the vascular responses to intravascular pressure changes, the most diverse methods for blood flow value measurements were being applied. At the same time, the approach to studying these responses was also somewhat modified. If Bayliss associated the reaction of vascular musculature to stretch with the mechanism of vascular tone organization, then in the majority of current works dealing with the vascular responses to intravascular pressure variation, emphasis is made not so much on the characteristics of vascular smooth muscle features but on the study of the finite result of their activity, i.e. changes in the vascular bed resistance to the blood stream. Such an approach to the question namely led to the fact that the vascular reaction to intravascular pressure changes was, as a rule, designated not as the response to stretch, but as the autoregulation of the blood flow as the property of the vascular bed under study (Johnson, 1964). The latter term does not imply the nature of the agent inducing the vascular response, but nevertheless, it emphasizes the eventual result, a tendency to maintain a relatively steady level of blood flow during intravascular pressure variation. It is clear that the notion of "autoregulation" per se appears to have wider meaning and embraces a large class of regulatory processes, but in the world's physiological literature, this term has been established and has become commonly accepted namely in this narrow sense. We will, later on, employ this most currently used term. Further extension of the problem of vascular responses to intravascular pressure alteration was greatly enhanced by works of Selkurt in 1946 on the kidney and by Folkow in 1949 on extremity, which proved to be an effective and well documented evidence for the vessels' active response to intravascular pressure changes. Though similar evidence since Ostroumoff and Bayliss had been obtained earlier (Winton, 1931; Glaser, Laszlo, Schurmeyer, 1932; Hartmann, Orskov, Rein, 1936; Unna, 1935; Malmejac, 1939), neither Selkurt nor Folkow found anything that was principally new, but in their experiments qualitative estimation of changes in blood flow was replaced by quantitative recording, and what is more, their papers were published when the regulation of organ blood flow became the subject of numerous investigations and the existence of the vascular peripheral tone was proven. Early in the 1940's, a large number of investigations showing the ratio between blood flow values and arterial pressure in different regions of the vascular bed were considered. Methods of these investigations boiled down to the fact that they modulate the pressure under which blood flows along the isolated artery and that they monitor by some means the insuing thereat changes in blood flow values in the vascular bed of the organ by measuring, in
Some Theoretical Prerequisites
11
particular, the amount of blood passing through the organ, artery, or vein. If the effect of the intravascular pressure fall within arteries is considered, then the latter can be achieved by applying pressure to the vessel of a screw cuff: the more the artery is occluded, the more pressure decreases distally from the place of occlusion, where it is recorded. In order to elevate the pressure above the original level, either a perfusion pump is used or a systemic arterial pressure is increased (for instance, occlusion of the carotid arteries). Similar investigations have convincingly shown the existence of autoregulatory vascular responses in quite various organs: the kidney, skeletal muscle vessels, and the vessels of abdominal organs, the coronary and cerebral vessels. The most comprehensive study was made on the autoregulatory responses, namely of the cerebral vessels, both of the entire vascular bed and of its different regions up to individual vessels (Forbes, Wolff, 1928; Fog, 1937, 1938; Carlyle, Grayson, 1956; Kety, 1958; Lassen,1959, 1964; Haggendal, Johansson, 1965; Harper, 1966; Konrady, Parolla, 1966; Mchedlishvili, 1968; Konrady et al., 1969; Mchedlishvili, Mitagvaria, Ormotsadze, 1971, 1972). It should be pointed out that during direct measurement of the global cerebral blood flow that is necessary for flow-pressure curves plotting, the results obtained by different studies are rather controversial. Some of them in such experiments found autoregulation of cerebral blood flow (Carlyle, Grayson, 1956; Lassen, 1959; Held et al., 1972), some rejected its existence (Hirsch, Korner, 1961), while others observed autoregulation in some experiments and no autoregulation in others. Yet, to-date the majority of investigators consider the existence of autoregulation of the cerebral circulation as a firmly established fact. It has also been established that it is restricted to definite pressure ranges. In a very general mode this range appears to be between the "low" and "high" levels of perfusion pressure (see Figure 1 according to Lassen and Skinhoj, 1975). In view of wide individual differences, the range of autoregulation has not been distinctly established so far. Depending on the statistical readout (experimental or clinical data) which the investigator has, there appear in the literature both rather narrow and sufficiently wide ranges tending toward low as well as high pressures. Thus, for example, Fazio (1970), observing autoregulation at systemic arterial pressure (SAP) equal to 300 mm Hg, suggests that the upper limit is not known yet. The limits of autoregulation, reported by Van Aken (1976) are: lower limit being 60-80, while upper, 150-200 mm Hg. Beyond the indicated limits, CBF passively follows SAP changes. In acordance with Greisen the lower threshold for cerebral autoregulation can be assumed to be 30 mm HG or below. When blood pressure falls below this threshold, CBF decreases more than in proportion to pressure due to elastic reduction in vascular diameter, but significant blood flow can be assumed to continue untill the blood pressure is well below 20 mm Hg (Greisen, 2007). In the category of firmly established facts is attributed a disturbance in the CBF autoregulation process (up to its abolishment altogether) during brain lesions (Reivich, Marshall, Kassel, 1969; Sakuma, 1977; Mascia et al., 2000; Czosnyka et al., 2001; Hlatky et al., 2002; Steiner et al., 2003), anaesthesia (Moskalenko, Zelikson, 1973; Tibble et al., 2001), sustained hypoxia (Freeman, Ingvar, 1968; Haggendal, 1968; Kogure et al., 1970) ischemia (Agnoli et al., 1966; Hong et al.,2001; Sundgreen et al., 2001), hypercapnia (Harper, 1966; Haggendal, Johansson, 1968; Parolla, Beer, 1975; Lu et al., 2004; Aksa et al., 2006; Rozet et al., 2006), hemorrhagy (Dernbach et al., 1988; Soehle et al., 2004) and trumatic brain injury (Engelborghs et al., 2000; Tibble et al., 2001; Steiner et al., 2003). Impairement of CBF
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autoregulation has also been demonstrated in a rat model of Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis (Pedersen et al., 2007). Hence, autoregulation of CBF is believed to be a process ultimately susceptible to disturbances of various genesis that are likely to occur within the brain, though the results of our studies (Mitagvaria, 1983, 1985) differ, as will be shown further in this study in some details.
Figure 1. General mode of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) autoregulation (Lassen, Skinhoj, 1975).
Although the very fact of the existence of CBF autoregulation has been universally adopted and causes no doubts in investigators, that is not the case with the explanation of the mechanisms underlying it. A vast number of studies which deal with this topic adhere largely to three theories summarized as follows: 1. The myogenic theory asserts that the stretch of the walls of the small arteries leads to changes in the activity of the smooth muscles of these walls. Myogenic activity enhances with a rise of pressure, and, as a result, there develops vasoconstriction bringing about an increase in the resistance to blood flow. 2. The metabolic theory postulates that the level of CBF is mediated by the concentration of one or another substance within the tissue, which is either utilized or produced by metabolism. During perfusion pressure falls that do not entail changes in metabolism, a decrease in CBF attenuates the tissue oxygen tension and enhances CO2 tension. Both factors result in the reduction of the tone of resistance in vessels and in the increase of blood flow. During perfusion pressure rise, the reverse is observed. 3. In the neurogenic theory, a disruption of blood supply to the cerebral tissue is perceived by the receptor zone and, depending on the direction of changes in perfusion pressure, the corresponding commands are sent along the dilatory or constrictory effector fibres, which innervate the cerebral vessels. Each of these theories will be described in details later on, but here it is necessary to mention also another, less popular theory appealing to tissue pressure. This theory denies the active change of the vascular smooth muscle tone and explains autoregulation as induced by mechanical factors. According to this theory the arterial pressure elevation leads to the increase of transmural pressure and infiltration fluid pressures on the capillary level. If rigid
Some Theoretical Prerequisites
13
walls exist in the organ, tissue pressure inside it enhances, which result in vessel compression. During the pressure fall, the opposite will likely happen (Johnson, 1964). Over the decades, at almost all symposia and conferences, devoted to topics of CBF regulation, debates have been going on among the adherents of the above mentioned first three theories. Statistical analysis of popularity of one or another theory could yield an interesting picture of crises and revivals of each of them. As a matter of fact, each of the three theories, or, in other words, each of the three hypothetical mechanisms, are theoretically in a position to describe the process of autoregulation, either independently, or in conjunction with others. However, detalization of concrete loops of regulation, localization and characteristics of functioning of separate links of these loops, determination of the feedback channels are to day still impossible. Consequently, the question as to the mechanism or mechanisms of CBF autoregulation still remains open.
1.2. POSSIBLE REASONS FOR CONTROVERSIAL INTERPRETATIONS OF THE RESULTS IN THE STUDY OF AUTOREGULATION The above survey of the basic theories of local CBF autoregulation clearly indicates that controversies exist even in interpretating the homogeneous experimental data. So how can one expect to find a universal theory (or hypothesis) on the functioning of a system of CBF autoregulation? Lets look at how such a situation came to exist. I.There are various methods used in measuring and thus altering arterial pressure (input disturbing factor). Let us briefly analyze the most frequently utilized methods.
Input Disturbing Factor Survey of reported data in the literature indicates that conventional methods used in alteration of systemic arterial pressure are: For induction of hypotension: a). Exanguination. During time there is a relatively slow reduction of SAP whose velocity appears to not be controllable. When hypotension persists long enough, acidosis develops. This view is quite justified (Kontos et al., 1978) that this method can barely be considered as pressor influence that is certainly necessary in autoregulation studies. b). Pharmacochemical hypotension, (develops, for example, by injection of bromide hexametonin). This enables control, to certain extent, of the level of SAP. Yet, the velocity of SAP falls and its duration appears to be uncontrollable.
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Nodar P. Mitagvaria and Hiam I. Bicher c). Electrical stimulation of the peripheral end of right vagus nerve causes bradycardia and a subsequent abrupt fall in SAP. The level of hypotension is virtually impossible to regulate. Cardiac rhythm is soon released from the influence of the vagus and SAP recovers. d). Occlusion of larger arteries which supply the brain with blood leads to a sharp decrease of perfusion pressure. The level of hypotension is poorly controlled, while collateral pathways of blood supply are not able to regulate its duration. The responsiveness of cerebral vessels are lost by repeated occlusions. e). Occlusion of the inferior cava vena, results in the attenuation of the venous inflow of blood to the heart with a subsequent hypotension. The speed at which the pressure falls and the level of hypotension and its duration are controlled, in case there is a need to regulate the velocity and degree of the venous occlusion.
Induction of Hypertension: a). a). Elevation of SAP is accomplished by means of infusion of blood or blood substitutes in the arterial system. The level and duration of hypertension are well controlled, while the velocity of elevating pressure is not. b). b). Pharmacological hypertension (can be induced, for example, by injection of noradrenaline or angiotensin). The velocity, level and duration of SAP increases and they appear to be virtually uncontrollable. c). c). Occlusion of larger arteries (for example, abdominal aorta) disrupts blood supply to an extensive area of the body and thus causes an increase in SAP. This method is the same method described above for the occlusion of the vena cava. The level of cerebral perfusion pressure can be easily varied and controlled by the use of a perfusion pump. Complex surgical interventions, that are usually required to facilitate perfusion, may disturb or even completely abolish autoregulation of CBF, (Zwetnow et al., 1968), thus offering incorrect results (Siesjo et al., 1980). There is a wide spectrum of methodical procedures used to induce hypo- and hypertension. There is still a wider spectrum of possible pitfalls relating to the purity of the pressure effect obtained. Each of them will introduce its correction toward the ultimate result of the experiment. Evaluation of the above methods in relation to input disturbance has shown occlusion of the inferior vena cava (hypotension) and occlusion of the abdominal aorta (hypertension) to be the most acceptable methods. (Apart from the highest "purity" from the point of view of the pressure effect, these impacts provide for, manageable in relation to the level and duration, a sharp saccadic variation of SAP toward increase or decrease.) The method most frequently employed, that of exanguination is found to be the least acceptable. II.Incomparability of the methods employed for the evaluation of the CBF autoregulation process (output parameter of the regulating system). Below, in Table 1 an assortment of the methods being utilized most frequently for experimental and clinical studies of the CBF autoregulation is presented. Advantages and disadvantages from the point of view of studying CBF autoregulation are briefly discussed.
Some Theoretical Prerequisites
15
As seen in this table, direct and indirect, quantitative and qualitative, continuous and discrete (including a single measurement) methods were employed. (They possess various resolving capacity encompassing different levels of vascular reservoir of the brain.) Table 1. Advantages and disadvantages of different methods, using for study of the Cerebral Blood Flow autoregulation Methods Direct pial vessels visualization (“transparent” skull)
Advantages in vivo observation; vessel diameter continuous recording; exact localization of observed vessels; no inertial
Micropuncture of cerebral vessels
- direct measurement of pressure gradients along vessel
Fixation and histological observation of cerebral vessels Autoradiography
- permits study of vessels in deep cerebral tissue;
Impedance plethismography
Thermoelectric methods
Thermal clearance Clearance of diffusible indicators Clearance of non diffusible indicators Electrochemical generation of hydrogen
Transcranial doplerography .
Single photon emission tomography and Functional MRI Laser Doppler-flow metering
- quantitative measurement of cerebral blood flow dynamically; usable in chronic experiments; no inertial - continuous recording in acute and chronic experiments - quantitative cerebral blood flow measurements - quantitative measurement of local blood flow in different brain areas simultaneously - qualitative determination of local blood flow in different brain areas simultaneously - quantitative and qualitative recording of local cerebral blood flow in microareas of tissue under acute or chronic conditions noninvasive technique; evaluation of blood linear velocity in cerebral vessels.
Disadvantages not usable in chronic experiments only surface vessels accessible; no information of blood flow rate; difficult to maintain continuous recording for long time periods not usable in chronic experiments only surface vessels accessible; no direct information of blood flow rate; technique very difficult; data tends to be inhomogeneous - discrete measurements; - no blood flow determination; - errors related to fixation technique; - not dynamically; - not usable in chronic experiments not quantitative; not suited for blood flow measurements; low degree of area localisation - errors due to brain tissue heat production; - low resolution; - high inertia - same as previous - discrete measurement; - big volume of tissue flow averaging; - errors due to diffusion - same as previous
- quantitative errors possible
does not allow to estimate volumetric parameters of a blood-flow; "operator-dependence" (an essential role the angle of an inclination of the probe)
- dynamical evaluation of local blood flow
- not quantitative measurements; - high cost
- noninvasive
- not quantitative measurements; - "operator-dependence" (essential role of mechanical shift of the probe)
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Of course, the more methods that are employed for studying a given problem, the greater the chance for its comprehensive analysis and successful resolution. However, contradictions naturally occur when comparisons are attempted based on results only, omitting to take into account the peculiarities of experimental conditions as well as proper evaluation the technique employed. The state of the experimental animal is also variable.
Choice of the Parameter to be Regulated Continuous recording of the diameter of blood vessels appear to be the best method for studying the dynamics of autoregulation of blood vessels. Several difficulties are inherent in this procedure. According to available evidence, regulation of the vascular lumen throughout the entire vascular bed is affected in a diffuse and hierarchical way (Jones, Berne, 1964; Mchedlishvili, 1968). That is to say that the vascular bed is to be considered a system with distributed parameters. In such a structure, autoregulation reactions of a subsequent part of the vascular bed may result from both an inability to compensate from the preceding bed, (Mchedlishvili, Mitagvaria, Ormotsadze, 1972) as well as its surplus (Mchedlishvili et al., 1969). This heterogeneity of reactions and the coupling of individual vessels along the entire vascular bed make the observation of a particular vessel of little use. Attempts at studying a particular vessel at a given point in the vascular bed requires the measurement of pressure directly inside of it or at its input. This is next to impossible to accomplish. While attempting to study an isolated vessel, it is well known that it looses its capacity to autoregulate reactions (Burnstock, Prosser, 1960; Uchida et al., 1967). While recording the changes in vascular diameter, how can one begin to speak of the interaction during the course of observed reaction, when the mechanisms are of such a diverse nature? The effect of the latter ought to be judged by the blood flow volume velocity change which occurs in the vessel. How can data be evaluated by vascular diameter value and then to the value of blood flow volume, when precise intravascular pressure is unknown? Its value will be determined by inaccurate measurements of intravascular pressure and its inherent methodical errors. These errors become apparent during measurement of blood vessel diameter, since it is dependent on the type of the vessel under study (Chernukh, Aleksandrov, 1976). Keep in mind that in our studies of autoregulatory vascular responses advantage was given to local blood flow recording in different microareas of the cerebral cortex. From the point of view of local blood flow, changes in the vascular bed may be considered as a system with lumped parameters, since it is of no importance in which part of the vascular lumen regulatory changes occur. Local blood flow will reflect these changes unequivocally. In addition, recording of blood flow should be continuous, for it is only in this way the adequate dynamic characteristics of the functioning of the local CBF regulation system can be evaluated. Significance can occur in a fraction of a second while studying this system (Moskalenko et al., 1975). Note that the larger the volume of "measurable" tissue region is, the greater the number of parallel connected regulating vessels would be involved in the regulation of blood flow. Any variations in blood flow can be accounted for by the superpositioning of the reactions of the numerous regulatory vessels. These apparently, impede the possibility of judging the
Some Theoretical Prerequisites
17
responses of individual vessels. Therefore, a limited tissue volume region should be urged to study. In doing so, reduction in the probability of CBF changes of a multicomponent nature, will be reduced. That is to say that the probability for their induction by a joint action of a number of parallel connected regulating vessels will be reduced. In measuring it is of no importance in which site the regulatory changes of the vascular diameter are observed. It should be kept in mind that with such a minimal volume of the examined tissue region extrapolating to typical vascular responses presents a challenge. Therefore, it is suggested that the local blood flow measurements be taken concomitantly in several tissue regions and each study as many of regions as possible, ultimately treating the whole statistical analysis. There were two basic requirements needed to be met in choosing technique for local CBF measurements. 1. Possibility of continuous measurement of blood flow and 2. Least volume of measurement tissue for region. All of other requirements did not differ from an accepted experimental procedure (Moskalenko, Khilko, 1984). Analysing the possibilities of the methods represented in Table 1, as well as taking into account data provided by Demchenko (1976) in methodical work, we have arrived at the conclusion that it is the method of local CBF measurement based on the principle of electrochemical generation of hydrogen which occurs directly in cerebral tissue (Stosseck, Lubbers, 1970; Stosseck, Lubbers, Cottin, 1974) that most completely meets the above indicated requirements. Experience in application of this method of local CBF measurement and the study of microcirculation has revealed a broad scope of possibilities (Moskalenko et al., 1975; Mitagvaria et al., 1976; Meladze et al., 1977; Koshu et al., 1982; Mitagvaria, 1983).
Measurement of Local CBF by means of Electrochemical Generation of Hydrogen The technique, as a matter of fact, is a modification of commonly known method of hydrogen clearance based on polarographic measurement of hydrogen tension by way of platinum electrodes (Clark, Bargeron, 1959; Hyman, 1961; Aukland et al.,1964; Aukland, 1965, 1968; Fieschi et al.,1965, 1969; Gotoh et al.,1966; Lubbers, 1968). The velocity of hydrogen clearance, preliminarily administered into the brain by means of inhalation or intraarterial injection, is known to be dependent on the blood flow intensity in the site of measurement. It has been, however, demonstrated that in the case of one or the other mode of introduction hydrogen from the small pial arteries diffuses in the surrounding tissue and veins. Diffusion on this level appeared to considerably distort the calculated value of blood flow (Wodick et al.,1969). In this context, a system has been developed which delivers hydrogen directly to tissue and eliminates the problem of diffusional loss and shunting diffusion (Stosseck, 1970a). In this system hydrogen is generated by electric current and is then measured polarographically. Generation and measurement are accomplished in two nearlying points of the tissue surface by means of soldered into glass platinum wires. By the law of Faraday, the amount of generated hydrogen is proportionate to the value and duration of
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current pulse in the generation circuit (Adams, 1969). In electrolytic solution, hydrogen ions are reduced to molecular hydrogen on the platinum electrode, provided it is attached to the negative potential. Consequently, by the passage of a current between the two electrodes, contacting to the brain, one may obtain a stable generation of hydrogen in order to saturate the tissues surrounding the cathode. The other platinum wire measures polarographically the hydrogen partial pressure at the site of the generation. Thanks to the appropriate construction of the electrode, changes in hydrogen partial pressure (in the regimen of continuous generation) after some initial period of tissue saturation are determined by washing out hydrogen from the saturated region with tissue blood flow, i.e. they reflect variation of the latter. Moreover, when tissue volume is equal to 2-0.1 cubic mm (Stosseck, Lubbers, Cottin, 1974; Demchenko, 1983) this method allows both for qualitative and quantitative measurements of blood flow value, and it is considerably more dynamic in the latter case than any other method (Moskalenko et al.,1975). Quantitative measurement is however hampered by such factors as a complex dependence of hydrogen diffusion velocity within tissue on blood flow values through the tissue, (Wodick, 1973). This is especially seen under conditions of permanent and rapid variability of blood flow. Experience shows that even the dynamic character of this method (in quantitative measurements) really lags behind the dynamics of blood flow changes during autoregulatory reactions (Meladze et al., 1977; Mitagvaria et al., 1976, 1978, 1981; Mitagvaria, 1983). Therefore, we have chosen in the majority of cases to restrict our analysis to qualitative assessment of autoregulatory responses of blood vessels to SAP changes.
Figure 2. (A) - a principal scheme of local generation of hydrogen and measurements of its tension in the brain tissue, (B) - construction of the electrode.
Some Theoretical Prerequisites
19
Figure 2A represents a principal scheme of local generation of hydrogen and measurements of its tension on the brain surface. The closing of a circuit leads to the passage of direct current in range 0.3-1.0 mcA (permissible deviation from the selected value is not more than 1%) and accordingly, to the generation of hydrogen in tissue. As in the process of generation impedance of the generating electrode varies, tension in the generation circuit may range from 500 to 800 mV. The reference electrode (platinum wire) is grounded and is connected to the positive pole of the current source. The construction of the electrode which we employed is presented in the same figure (2B). It consists of five platinum wires soldered in glass. The central wire 200 mcm in diameter serves as a generator providing saturation with hydrogen of a tissue microregion with a volume up to 2 cubic mm. Around it, at the distance of 200-300 mcm four measuring wires (with the diameter of 100 mcm each) are placed. Polarographic recordings are made by hydrogen tension concomitantly in four adjacent microregions of cerebral tissue. 3. Inadequacy of the methodological approaches employed for the study of CBF autoregulation process. The problem of using methods that determine static characteristics while attempting to analyze a regulatory system which is dynamic was discussed in the introduction of the book.
Chapter II
MAIN THEORIES OF AUTOREGULATION OF CBF 2.1. MYOGENIC THEORY The author of myogenic theory of autoregulation Bayliss (1906) stated that blood pressure per se with its expansion (stretching) power induces a permanent tonic contraction of the vascular smooth muscles. In Bayliss' view, active responses of vessels are due to direct changes in the stretch rate of their walls, elicited by a variation of intravascular pressure. This idea intrigued many an investigator to pursue the study of the vascular responses to stretch, as the stretch with the power of transmural pressure may be considered as a constant contributor to the formation of the vascular tone. The primary objective of the investigations in question was to prove that the changes occurring in the vascular tone during variation of intravascular pressure are not due to the content of vasoactive metabolites as claimed by the adherents of the metabolic theory of autoregulation. Under natural conditions of blood circulation, it is extremely difficult to obtain direct evidence for the reaction of vascular muscles only to their stretch by intravascular pressure. Since variation of the latter (except the case when it is induced under the influence on veins by means of resistography) will by all means entail also changes in the amount of blood flowing through the tissue and, consequently, change in the amount of products of metabolism and hormones. This is why arguments about the myogenic theory have come to the point where facts often did not agree with the metabolic concept itself. Facts, very frequently are obtained not by the process of autoregulation itself, but by such processes as functional and reactive hyperemia. Thus, a large number of studies that were undertaken provided indirect evidence that reactive hyperemia developed also under the conditions which did not lead to the accumulation of vasoactive metabolites (Malmejac, 1939; Folkow, 1949; Mood, Wilkins, 1956; Haddy, Scott, 1964; Dahn, Lassen, Westling, 1967; Konradi, Levtov, 1970). Furthermore, in terms of the metabolic theory, it is very difficult to explain ischemic effects: ischemia produced by the clamping of veins does not result in reactive hyperemia, or if it does, it is very insignificant (Gaskell, 1878/1879; Bayliss, 1902; Folkow, 1949, 1953a, 1953b, 1962; Levtov, 1967; Kan, Levtov, 1970). Direct studies of reactive hyperemia also did not support the metabolic interpretation (Konradi et al.,1969), but later the multiple
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mechanisms (metabolic, myogenic and passive) has been described (Lombard et al., 1981). Recently, Toth et al. (2007) demonstrated that anaerobic vasodilator metabolites are responsible for the increase in reactive hyperemia with arterial occlusion longer than 45 s. A potent argument in favour of the myogenic theory supports the finding that when the normal pulsatile regimen of arterial pressure is replaced by the nonpulsatile, the vascular tone is altered (Held et al.,1972; Mellander, Arvidsson, 1974). This event can hardly be explained by the metabolic theory. Particular interest should be paid to studies of the isolated vessels and smooth muscle preparations where the investigator is dealing directly with the substrate responsible for the contractile act. Proof of the myogenic theory of autoregulation should be sought after by studying the properties of smooth muscle fibers directly. Therefore, Bayliss in his time made an endeavour to substantiate his conclusions about the nature of autoregulatory vascular responses in experiments on isolated large arteries: by elevating pressure in them he observed (though not in all cases) their constriction (Bayliss, 1923). The results obtained by other investigators also verify the capability of isolated vessels to actively react to changes in intravascular pressure (Muchholder, 1921; Burgi, 1944; Sparks, Bohr, 1962; Davignon, Lorenz, Shepherd, 1965; Plekhanov, 1967; Joyce, Rack, Westbury, 1969). In the course of such experiments spontaneously generated rhythmic biopotentials were observed in the vascular smooth muscles. The rhythmic bursts of electrical activity were as a rule, accompanied by contraction of muscles (Funaki, 1961; Funaki, Bohr, 1964; Axelsson et al.,1967; Nakaijama, Horn, 1967; Gurevich, Bernstein, 1969; Orlov et al.,1971; Brandt, Enzenross, 1976; Baez, 1977; Aubineau, Lusamvuku, Sercombe, 1978), which lead to the origination of the concept of automation of vascular smooth muscles (Konradi, 1973). It was found that in response to the passive stretch of the smooth muscles the frequency of action potentials increased and, accordingly enhanced the contractile activity (Bulbring, Kurijama, 1963; Sparks, 1964; Davignon, Lorenz, Shepherd, 1965; Johansson, Bohr, 1968; Holman et al.,1968). Synthesis of these observations with in vivo studies has resulted in formulation of the myogenic hypothesis (Folkow, 1964), in which a myogenically active smooth muscle of a vessel acts as a mechanoreceptor, whose distension by way of acting on the rhythm driver causes facilitation of impulses bioelectric discharge, spreading over the nearby lying effector cells of the muscle. The net action of this mechanoelectric coupling is evidenced in the variation of generation rate of the rhythm driving spikes in response to deformation and respective active changes of the vascular tone. The role of rhythm drivers in the entire vascular network of each organ is played, in Folkow's view, by the smooth muscles of the precapillary sphincters. As far as the last statement is concerned, it does not seem sufficiently well substantiated, but hypothesis as a whole has become widely spread and supported (Khaijutin, Manveljan, 1963; Bevan, Ljung, 1974; Mellander, Arvidsson, 1974; Johansson, Mellander, 1975). As a result, the question of the myogenic theory of autoregulation has been addressed mainly within the framework of this hypothesis and a number of fairly interesting facts have been revealed. In particular, the existence of a "static" and "dynamic" components of vascular responses to stretch has been established (Johansson, Mellander, 1975; Mellander, Lundvall, Grande, 1976; Grande, Lundvall, Mellander, 1977, Zeidan et al., 2003) and characteristic peculiarities of these components have been displayed (Sigurdsson,
Main Theories of Autoregulation of CBF
23
Johansson, Mellander, 1977, Brookes, Kaufman, 2003; Preisman et al., 2005, Ichinose et al., 2007; Just, 2007). Yet ultimately the question of the significance of myogenic mechanism for the development of autoregulatory vascular responses and of its interaction with neurogenic and metabolic mechanisms remains so far open that is solely due, as Orlov believes (1980), to study the myogenic properties of the finest vessels. Apparently, we have to add here that "...the standard study of autoregulation consists in revealing in fact the static characteristics of organ hemodynamics during step-by-step changes in perfusion pressure. Under these conditions, the initial fast component of autoregulatory responses to shifts in systemic hemodynamics cannot be detected..."(Teplov, 1980, p.13). Though Teplov in the given case under the "fast" component implied the neurogenic mechanism of autoregulation, his words may be even more successfully applied to the myogenic mechanism. In essence, its manifestation must precede manifestation of all other mechanisms.
2.2. METABOLIC THEORY The idea of a regular influence of metabolites on cerebral blood flow was first put forth by Roy and Sherrington (1890) at the end of the XIX century. The authors supposed that the value of cerebral blood flow was determined by two factors: a) Systemic arterial pressure and b) Intrinsic mechanisms based on the action of metabolic products which are capable of modulating the degree of blood supply to the brain in accordance with variation of its functional activity. Still earlier Roy and Brown (1879) revealed the participation of metabolites in reactive hyperemia on the frog's denervated paw. Subsequently, the hypothesis of metabolic regulation of blood flow has ben experimentally confirmed in Gaskell's (1890) studies. Based on the first evidence cited by the author, a number of issues were outlined which later on became the objectives for further studies, thus providing a theoretical prerequisite for the metabolic concept. In terms of the concept, the metabolic mechanism, one of the leading ones in regulation of vascular hemodynamics, provides adequate tissue blood supply in dependence on its functional-metabolic demands. At the start of XX century Anrep (1912a, b) related the concept of metabolic regulation of blood flow to the basis of organ blood supply autoregulation. Increase in blood flow occurred while a decrease in intravascular pressure happened. He explained that by accumulation of metabolites suppressed the contractile activity of the vascular smooth muscles. Indeed, a large number of findings indicate the compatibility of these ideas. Many substances formed in the process of metabolism were found to dilate the blood vessels. At local level the vasodilatory effect is exerted also by CO2, by products of unaerobic glycosis, metabolites of the Crebs cycle, potassium ions, ATP-conversion products and local hormones - acetylcholine, histamine, serotonin, bradykinin, etc. (Sokoloff, 1959, 1977; Bohr, Goulet, 1961; Betz, 1972, 1976, 1977; Carpi, Cartoni, Giardoni, 1972; Olesen, 1972, 1975; Allen et
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al.,1974; Mrwa, Achtig, Ruegg, 1974; Bevan, Ducless, Lee, 1975; Forrester et al.,1975; Cameron, Caronna, 1976; Csornai, 1976; Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1976, 1977; Astrup et al.,1977; Tagashira et al.,1977; Britton et al.,1979; Chung, Detar, 1980; Detar, 1980; Hansen et al.,1984; Henser et al.,1985; Wahl et al.,1986, 1987; Vainshtein et al.,1988). Independent groups of vasoactive factors are formed in the process of metabolism. These are adenine nucleotides which are the by-products of breakdown of ATP: ADP, AMP, adenosine, inosine, hypoxantine, xantin, urea (Halfen, Denisova, 1975; Fetisova, Sokolova, 1979). The presence of these factors was established in the interstitial fluid, liquor and blood (Rubio, Berne, 1969; Berne et al.,1984). Under conditions of functional rest the concentration of adenosine in the liquor of canine cerebral ventricles appears to be within the ranges 6*10-8 - 6*10-7 mol/l (Berne, 1980). In the canine coronary blood in the period of postischemic hyperemia adenosine was found in the concentration 1.3*10-7 M (Rubio, Berne, 1969). Adenosine is one of the products of ATP breakdown, and is accumulated in the extracellular spaces: breakdown of intracellular ATP, mediator adenosine, released from the synaptic clefts of purinergic nerve fibers, an enzymatic formation of 5-adenosylhomocystin (Shartz et al.,1978). Two possible pathways of adenosine formation were identified in the brain: 1) from 5-AMP in the reactions catalysed by 5-nucleotidase, alkalic or acidic phosphatase, 2) from 2AMP catalysed by 2-nucleotidase (Romanenko, 1985, Pedata et al., 2001; Diogenes et al., 2004). An increase in the adenosine content in the brain is observed during hypoxia, hypercapnia, systemic arterial pressure fall, electrical activation of the cortical neurons, enhancement of functional activity of nervous tissue (Rubio et al.,1978). Thus, in rats when systemic arterial pressure reduced to 72 mm Hg, adenosine in the brain tissue increased twofold, whereas the content of nucleotides and phosphocreatine remained unaltered. In the case of pressure decreased up to 45 mm Hg with maintenance of cerebral blood flow autoregulation the adenosine content increased by six times. Lactate concentration increased from 1.02 to 5.25 in proportion with blood pressure attenuation (Winn et al.,1985). Concentration of adenosine in the rat's brain tissue according to Winn et al. (1985) increased 3 fold within a 10 sec period after the arterial pressure fell and attained a maximum which 5 times exceeded the control level per 60 seconds; the content of adenosine coincided with the doses necessary for manifesting pronounced changes in the diameter and resistance of vessels during local application. Consequently, these data indicate that adenosine may exert a considerable influence on regulation of cerebral blood flow. At the same time, Gregory et al. (1970, 1980) expressed doubt regarding the participation of adenosine in dilation of vessels during cerebral ischemia. It was found that only in concentrations 10-5 M adenosine caused dilatation of the pial arteries in cats by 29.2%. Moreover, under conditions of hypoxia, hypercapnia and hypotension the dilatory effect of adenosine is attenuated by 50, 71 and 2.4%, respectively. During hypocapnia (aPCO2 = 25 mm Hg) dilatation response of the cortical arteries to the action of adenosine decreases up to 14.5%. However, in hypercapnia (aPCO2 = 48 mm Hg) inactivity of cerebral vessels to adenosine is maintained (Gregory et al.,1979, 1980). An opinion is expressed that the vasoactive action of adenosine is realized through the activation of specific cytoreceptors in the cerebral vascular smooth muscle cells (Beck et al.,1984; Edvinsson, Jensen, 1986). A marked variability of responses of the isolated cerebral
Main Theories of Autoregulation of CBF
25
arteries to adenosine was found in different species of animals, that seems to be associated with the species-specific distribution of adenosine receptors in the cerebral vessels. The most potent response to adenosine is shown by the arteries of rabbits, dogs and cats (the vessel diameter increases by 80-100%). In the human pial arteries adenosine reaction appears less pronounced - 43%. The basillary artery of guinea pigs shows an intensive reaction, but with a high index of concentration during which there occurs a 50% effect (Edvinsson, Jensen, 1986). During perivascular administration of adenosine in the concentration ranging from 10-17 to 10-3 M directly into the artery of the feline dura mater a vasodilatory effect which was in direct proportion to the value of the used dose is observed. Administration of a solution of adenosine to the pial arteries of various diameters resulted in their dilatation by similar values. At the 10-7 M concentration of adenosine arteries dilated by 8%, while at 10-3 M concentration by 30%. The degree of vasodilation was not dependent on the external diameter of the vessels ranging from 47 to 260 mcm (Wahl, Kuschinsky, 1976). However, upon intraarterial administration of adenosine (in the canine vertebral artery in the concentration 0.3-0.5 mg/kg/min) cerebral blood flow remained unaltered for 40 minutes (Boarini et al.,1984). Nevertheless, studies (Le Mey, Vanhoutte, 1981; Beck et al.,1983; Stephanovich, 1983; Mistry, Drummond, 1986) suggest the existence of a nucleotide transport system, in relationship to the endothelium of the cerebral capillaries. This somewhat modulates the idea of the interrelationship between adenosine and the blood-brain barrier. Kalaria et al. (1985) also assumed the existence of the adenosine transport system through the vascular endothelium and discussed participation of the nucleotide in question in the regulation of macro- and micromolecules transported through the blood-brain barrier. According to data of Mistry and Drummond (1986), endothelial cells of the heart and brain microvessels are capable of eliciting adenosine breakdown. This may be of some significance for local regulation of blood flow. It is likely that adenosine is incorporated in the realisation of hyperemia in conjunction with other nonoxidative products of metabolism in parallel with shifts in pH in the intracellular fluid, since the time of adenosine accumulation in brain tissue coincides with the formation of lactic acid (Mistry, Drummond, 1986). A correlation was found between the dilatory action of adenosine, pH medium and the content of some inorganic ions in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). When the pH in CSF shifts toward acidosis and potassium ions concentration increases, the attenuation of dilatory effect of adenosine on the smooth muscles of the feline pial arteries is observed (Wahl, Kuschinsky, 1977). Despite a large number of works which are concerned with the study of the mechanism of adenosine action on vascular smooth muscles, much remains unresolved. There is a lack of data relating to the influence of adenosine on the activity of Na,K-ATPase of the smooth muscle cellular membrane in cerebral arteries. Dependence of the adenosine effect on the smooth muscles of the coronary and femoral arteries upon the activity of Na-K pump of all membranes has been already demonstrated. The role of adenosine in the performance of vasoconstrictor response of vessels remains obscure. It was studied in the rabbit's kidney and canine hypodermic lipid tissue in response to sympathetic nerves stimulation with the introduction of noradrenaline. In these experiments the mechanism of adenosine action on the vasomotor reaction is explained by the authors not to be by its direct action on smooth muscles, but it is mediated through suppression of noradrenaline released from nerve
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terminals and the enhancement of the postsynaptic reaction to noradrenaline (Hedqvist, Predholm, 1976). There is a discrepancy in the data on the mechanisms of dilatation induced by adenosine and calcium. There is evidence indicating that in the mechanism of adenosine action the systems of calcium transmembrane transport to a smooth muscle cell are not involved (Kovach, Dora, 1982; Dutta et al.,1984). However the results of experiments with the large pial arteries reveal that a direct action of adenosine is realized by the superficial membrane of a smooth muscle cell (Gokina, Gurkovskaja, 1981) through the suppression of input extracellular calcium in the smooth muscle cell and direct decrease of intracellular concentration of calcium ions (Gokina et al.,1983; Nikitina, Shuba, 1983). Carbonic acid is capable of affecting the smooth muscle tone (Mchedlishvili et al.,1975; Azin, 1981; Harder, Madden, 1986). A large volume of evidence is available in the literature about the CBF increase when CO2 partial pressure is increased in the arterial blood (Kobari et al.,1987; Vainshtein et al.,1988). Threshold values of PCO2 have been determined, then a realization of vasodilatory effect in cerebral arteries begins. The initial rise of CBF manifests itself at CO2 tension in the arterial blood equal to 45-50 mm Hg (Patterson et al.,1955). Further increase in PCO2 in the arterial blood defines a linear increase of CBF intensity. The highest sensitivity of cerebral vessels to CO2 appears to be from 20 to 60 mm Hg in the arterial blood.(Reivich, 1964). Evidence exists for the interrelationship between PCO2 in the arterial blood and in brain tissue - when PCO2 increases in the blood there is a proportional increase of PCO2 in brain tissue also (Plum, Duffy, 1975; Seylaz et al.,1977). On the brain surface (Meyer, Gotoh, 1961) CO2 tension is measured at 8-10 mm Hg higher than in the arterial blood. The activation of the cortical neurons is also known to result in a definite increase in CO2 content in nerve tissue. Thus, while recording PCO2 on the surface of the cat's visual cortex by means of conductometry PCO2 increase by 2.5-4 mm Hg (Moskalenko et al.,1975) was obtained during activation of neurons in this area in response to photic stimulation. According to data of Demchenko (1983), blood flow in the cat's cerebral cortex increased by 0.03 ml/g/min in hypercapnia. At mean intensity of cortical blood flow in cats 0.9 ml/g/min this makes up 20%, whereas at electrical stimulation of the cortical neurons local blood flow increase makes up 80%, and at seizure activity 300%. So, the opinion that CO2 is a dilatator in the system of cerebral arteries appears to be a fairly well known fact. Nevertheless, the possibility of direct influence of CO2 on the smooth muscles of cerebral vessels and putative mechanisms of action of hypercapnia remains an open issue so far. There are two versions of postulates concerning this matter: neurogenic and humoral. Neurogenic hypothesis is supported by equivocal experimental data whose interpretation provides no distinct knowledge of the role the reflex nervous mechanisms play in the realization of hypercapnic effect. Mchedlishvili et al. (1975) bring up evidence for the responses of pial arteries occurring independently of PCO2 direct influence and intravascular pressure. The vascular responses are present due to the reflex feedback mechanism, which is initiated by nervous impulses from the pressoreceptor wall of the vessel or brain tissue. Additional data by Demchenko and Krivchenko (1980) has demonstrated that following the transaction of connections between the cortex and subcortical structures in cats, blood flow in the isolated hemisphere increases two times less than in the intact hemisphere during inhalation of 5-7%
Main Theories of Autoregulation of CBF
27
of CO2. At the same time there is opposing information. A lesion in the nuclei of the solitary tract in rats did not result in any changes in regional blood flow in the cortex, abolished autoregulation and the cerebral vascular responses to hyper- or hypocapnia did not alter thereat (Ishitsuka, 1986). In the experiments of Iadecola et al. (1986) rise in blood PCO2 was followed by CBF increase in all the areas under study including atropine treated cortical regions. Thus, there are fairly discrepant data on the role played by the reflex mechanism in mediation of CO2 vasomotor effects. There is also evidence on the humoral nature of the mechanism of action of CO2 on the smooth muscles of cerebral arteries. The vasoactive action of CO2 is supposed to be mediated through the increase in blood and liquid of the vasoactive substances (such as choline, potassium, adenosine, etc). A key role in the instalment of this mechanism in hypercapnia has been assigned to changes in pH of extracellular medium (Meyer, Gotoh, 1960; Meyer et al.,1961; Laptook, 1985; Adams et al.,1986). Indeed, reactivity of cerebral arteries to CO2 depends in a definite measure to pH of medium. Thus, CO2 effects were shown to be enhanced during an increase in the pH of the medium and somewhat attenuated when it decreased (Azin, 1981). It is known that pH does have an independent vasoactive action (Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1978: Harder et al.,1985) and, consequently, may exert a modulating influence on CO2 effects. In preparing the internal carotid arteries, Azin (1980) demonstrated that there are relatively independent effects of the CO2 and of the pH medium during the action on the smooth muscles of cerebral arteries. The results of these studies verify that CO2 actually acts on the smooth muscles of major cerebral arteries at a stable pH medium. Studying the effect of CO2 on the smooth muscle membrane and its role in realization of CO2 effects remains scant. Fragments of the feline middle cerebral artery show that PCO2 attenuation below the physiological value and at a pH = 7.4 lead to depolarization of the smooth muscle cell membrane. Alteration in the membrane resting potential is underlied by calcium permeability (Harder et al.,1985). Understanding the calcium mechanism which relaxes smooth muscles under the action of hypercapnia is still incomplete. An important role in the regulation of local CBF, apart from adenosine nucleotides and CO2, are inorganic ions, primarily ions of potassium. Variations in the K+ ion concentration in the solution may lead to diverse reactions of the cerebral arteries. Upon administration of an artificial liquid devoid of K+ ions to the brain surface of cats constriction of pial arteries, occurred while application of the identical solution, with K+ ions from 5 to 12 mcM/l resulted in vasodilation and enhancement of cortical blood flow by 40% (Moskalenko et al.,1975). Within the extracellular spaces under normal shifts in functional activity of nervous cells, changes in K+ concentration occur (Demchenko, Krivchenko, 1980). The process of K+ release from the cell during activation of neurons has a considerable velocity (Demchenko et al.,1975; Lin, 1985), high diffusion capability and a potent vasoactive action. This supports the assumption that K+ ions in conjunction with the neurogenic loop of regulation create a component of local CBF regulation. (Moskalenko et al.,1975). There are findings that indicate that K+ ions act directly on the smooth muscles of large cerebral arteries and that this effect does not depend on the pH of extracellular spaces. (Demchenko et al.,1975; Moskalenko, 1984). However, for this to occur definite concentrations of Ca++ ions in perivascular fluid have to be present.
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Direct action of K+ on the smooth muscle cells of cerebral arteries have been studied only on the isolated preparations of large vessels (Orlov et al.,1972; Azin et al.,1977). Utilizing preparations of the bovine middle cerebral artery with low K+ concentration (10 mM) resulted in a marked relaxation of smooth muscles. In the same work it was reported that in higher concentrations, K+ causes a contractile reaction. Similar findings were obtained by Picard et al. (1976). The distinct reactions with K+ concentration is explained by the fact that low concentration elicits hyperpolarization of the smooth muscle cell membrane along with relaxation, while a high concentration causes depolarization along with contraction (Winn et al.,1980). Substances formed in the process of metabolism, particularly under conditions of oxygen deficit, accumulate in the tissues which will lead to the dilatation of the vessels. However, in order to confirm the metabolic theory of autoregulation it is still necessary to prove that in tissues whose organs are at rest the phenomenon of autoregulation is permanently in a concentration of substances having a vasodilatory action that would be counteracting to the action of an agent, thus tending to constrict the vessels. Support for such a statement has been observed by a number of investigators who initiated the inflowing blood into the organ by artificially forcing venous blood from another organ (Anrep, Blalock, Saaman, 1934; Anrep, Saalfeld, 1935; Ross, Kaiser, Klocke, 1964). No correlation was found between the action on the vessels of the replacement of arterial blood by venous blood and the effect of blood flow attenuation (Daugherty et al.,1967; Guyton, 1977), Autoregulatory events occurring during short-lasting limitation of blood flow, need to be explained by the metabolic theory of autoregulation. During the process of autoregulation one can observe constriction of blood vessels in response to a rise in arterial pressure. Therefore, the metabolic theory of autoregulation has to agree that concentration in tissues with vasodilatory substances are always in direct proportion to the value of blood flow. If this is the case then it must also follow that during elevation in pressure blood flow will first increase while the concentration of the dilatator attenuates, predetermining enhancement of the vascular tone and therefore return of blood flow to the original value. Indeed, there are observations indicating that the period of artificial blood flow increase is occasionally followed by constriction of vessels designated as reactive ischemia (Hyman, Paldino, Zimmerman, 1963; Levtov, 1967), though in other studies it has been shown that the constrictory reaction of the vessels to pressure rise is not at all necessarily prestalled by blood flow increase (Held et al.,1972; Meladze et al.,1977; Mitagvaria, 1983). Another explanation for the autoregulatory vascular reactions to intravascular pressure rise is the idea that the vascular tone is determined by concentration of some substance toning up the elements of vascular wall. This substance should be carried in the blood. First, we are unaware of products of tissue metabolism to which a permanent stimulating action on the vascular smooth muscles could be ascribed, and, second, if this is the case the amount of this substance should increase as blood flow increases. There are studies in which such an idea has been justified. To the Krebs' solution a 2% blood plasma of the same animal to produce or enhance contraction of the embedded in the solution strip of isolated artery from dogs, rabbits or rats (Hysell, Bohr, 1970). The nature of the active agent is not identified. The pressor acting substance, which is similar to angiotensin, was also found to be in the extract from the walls of large arteries (Laszt, 1969).
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Lastly, one must be careful not to assume that the predominantly vasodilatory action of nonspecific metabolites is a constant. One of the most important statements in general physiology states that the effect of any stimulus depends on its intensity and on the state of the tissue it acts on. Thus for example, as pointed out above, when a specific concentration in the products of tissue metabolism is reached, dilation of the vessels usually occurs, and vasodilation is then replaced by vasoconstriction (Johansson, Bohr, 1966; Konradi, Levtov, 1970). Consequently, under conditions which are not yet understood, the dilatatory action of metabolites may then be converted into a constrictory action. Data accumulated during last decade suggest that Nitric Oxide (NO) is important for hemodynamic control and metabolic regulation (Kingwell, 2000). Although still controversial, NO of endothelial origin may potentiate hyperemia. Mechanisms of NO release include both acetylcholine derived and elevation in vascular shear stress (Kingwell, 2000). Use of phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging shows that hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilatation in humans is mediated by NO (Van Mill et al., 2003). In summary it should be noted that at present there is no reliable evidence which would ascribe a crucial role in the autoregulatory process to a permanent vascular effect of a chemical substance formed outside the vascular walls. There is not a specific link in metabolic process in the tissue to a specific hormone, which could be considered as the factor in the regulation of tonic tension of the vascular smooth muscles (Betz, 1972, 1976, 1977; Konradi, 1973; Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1976, 1978; Berne et al.,1981; Wei, Kontos, 1982; Vanhoutte, 1982).
2.3. NEUROGENIC THEORY OF AUTOREGULATION As proposed by neurogenic theory, disturbances in cerebral blood circulation are perceived by the receptive zone. Depending on the direction of changes in perfusion pressure, relevant signals are thus sent along the dilatory or constrictory effectors, innervating the cerebral vessels. This theory of autoregulation of cerebral blood supply is supported by abundant experimental findings, explanation of which is lacking in other theories. Let us consider these experimental data from a structural approach. In the cerebral vascular bed there are baroreceptor zones, which may in principle, be the initial link in the chain of the neurogenic mechanisms of autoregulation. (Madjagaladze, 1960; Mikhailov, 1961, 1965; Kuprijanov, Jitsa, 1975). The presence of the executive link is confirmed both by histological and ultrastructural studies, which testify to the rich adrenergic and cholinergic innervation of cerebral vessels including arterioles up to 15-20 mcm in diameter (Falck, Mchedlishvili, Owman, 1965; Sato, 1966; Nielson, Owman, 1967; Lavrentieva et al., 1968; Iwayama, Furness, Burnstock, 1970; Nelson, Rennels, 1970; Edvinsson, McKenzie, 1977; Gero et al., 1978, Bleyers, Cowen, 2001). A clear-cut uneven distribution of nerve terminals throughout the entire length of the vessel, which was visualized on the example of arteries of the circle of Willis, was established (Pereira, 1979). This brought Moskalenko (1978) to assume that in cerebral vessels there may exist local controlling zone capable of regulating the lumen of arteries in separate regions, thus resulting
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in the origination of the so-called "sausage effect", which is observable during some kind of influences on cerebral vessels (Adamia, 1986). The most richly innervated are the large cerebral arteries, especially those at the cranial base where both the adrenergic and cholinergic nerve terminals are represented. They are located at the adventitium of the vessels and are very near to each other. Thus functional interaction is possible. (Sercombe, Wahl, 1982a). The internal carotid artery has a dense innervation apparatus, particularly at its curvature (Borodulia, Plechkova, 1977). The pial and intracerebral arteries are poorly innervated and are predominantly supplied with adrenergic fibres (Lindvall, Biorklund, 1974), although there is data indicating the presence of serotonin- and peptidergic innervation. This is a common characteristic of the intracerebral arteries and arterioles (Brayden, Bevan, 1985; Yokote et al., 1985). The source of sympathetic adrenergic innervation of cerebral vessels is the superior cervical sympathetic ganglia (Sercombe et al., 1975; Traystman, Rapela, 1975). Evidence is available completely rules out the significance of the stellate ganglion in relation to regulation of cerebral circulation (Peerless, Yasargil, 1971). Some authors are sure that it is namely from this ganglion that the cerebral, major and inferior cerebral arteries are innervated (Nielsen, Owman, 1967; Kajikawa, 1969). Some hold to the understanding that the vessels of the cerebral vertebral reservoir have a double sympathetic innervation (Owman, Edvinsson, Nielsen, 1974; Edvinsson, 1975). The concept has also been set forth concerning the participation in this process of central formations localized namely in locus ceruleus whence the sympathetic fibers run to the vessels in the hypothalamus and the cerebral hemispheres (Mitchel et al.,1975), as well as to the fastigial nucleus of the cerebellum and a region of the dorsal medullary reticular formation (Doba, Reiss, 1972a; McKee et al.,1976; Reiss et al.,1982; Devdariani et al.,1989). Virtually in all studies which dealt with the cerebral vessels' innervation there is an indication that neural fibers terminate on the arterioles and do not spread over the capillaries. More complex in understanding is the matter of the source of parasympathetic cholinergic fibers. As far back as 1933, Finesinger and Putman pointed out that vasodilatory fiber must be found to be contained in the vagus nerve. The most popular hypothesis was that of Chorobski and Penfield (1932) which had been advanced by them a year previous their hypothesis maintained that the vasodilatory pathways are connected with the parasympathetic cholinergic fibers of the facial nerve. The same idea has been developed by Edvinsson et al. (1973). At the same time, in the opinion of Motavkin et al. (1981), parasympathetic vasodilators are present in none of the indicated nerves and this coincides with the viewpoint of Lazarthes (1956) who thinks that there is no authentic data which confirms on the presence of vasodilators in the craniocerebral nerves. Afferent innervation in the brain vessels is as abundant as the efferent innervation. By virtue of pharmacological methods and with the use of electrical stimulation of the cerebral sympathetic nerves the presence of both alpha- and beta-adrenoreceptors have been shown to be throughout the vascular bed and stimulation of alpha-adrenoreceptors has been found to result in constriction, while the beta-adrenoreceptors cause dilation of cerebral arteries. This link of the neurogenic mechanism of regulation of cerebral blood supply appears to be best studied to-date (as compared to the efferent link theory). In the theory, there exist two kinds of sources of afferent signals: baro - and chemoreceptors. The first receptors are found
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localized in the sinocarotid and aortal zones and at the sites of bifurcation of the large arteries, in the bulb of the jugular vein and in the dura mater. Chemoreceptors, as they are known, are located in the area of the carotid sinuses. It is also believed that afferent signals which influence the vessels originate from special tissue receptor formations in the brain, what has been shown to be the case in other organs (Moskalenko, Beketov, Orlov, 1988). The physiological role of the autonomic innervation of cerebral vessels remains unclear and the question of its involvement in the autoregulatory vascular reactions is controversial. This is so because of possible systemic reactions making it difficult to single out the direct action of adrenergic and cholinergic neurotransmitters on cerebral vessels (Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1978) and secondary effects which may mask the direct action of neurotransmitters on the cerebral vessels. There are other important circumstances that must be considered. When pharmacological agents are administered systemically, they are not certain to reach the smooth muscle cells because of the existence of the blood-brain barrier (Oldendorf, 1971). It is well established that the cerebral capillaries vary in their barrier properties from those of other organs both functionally and morphologically (Rapoport, 1976; Hardebo, Owman, 1980). Due to a particular morpho-functional organization of the endothelium (wherein the barrier is localized), only individual types of neurotransmitters are able to penetrate into it, and choice of one or another type of neurotransmitter may vary from area to area (Owman, Hardebo, 1982). This will account for the fact that only in newborn animals in which the blood-brain barrier has not yet evolved, one may observe the effects of the action of many transmitters (Loizou, 1970). If the barrier is disrupted for one or another reason, there arises quite a novel situation and it then becomes difficult to predict the effect of circulating neurotransmitters on the cerebral vessels. Other than the direct action, they, penetrate into the capillaries, enter the cerebral parenchyma, modulate the functional activity and metabolism of cerebral tissue. Whether the vessels vasodilate or vasoconstric, depends on the balance of forces which act on the vessels (Owman, Hardebo, 1982). One has to agree with the opinions of Moskalenko, Beketov and Orlov (1988) that except for the neural influences on the cerebral vessels of sympathetic and parasympathetic nature, verification of other putative types of innervation to the cerebral vessels such as purinhistamine-, and peptidergic ones, and their effects remains to be proven. Studies are being actively pursued at present. The authors take such a stand because none of the above mentioned types of innervation meet the five basic requirements which determine the presence of the neurogenic principle of regulation. 1) The transmitter should be synthesized and contained in the neural stems; 2) It should be released during stimulation of the nerves originating only in them and not in the surrounding tissues; 3) There should be specific receptors for the given transmitters; 4) There must be a special system of inactivation of this transmitter; 5) There should be found specific chemical agents blocking or potentiating the effect of action of this transmitter during stimulation of the nerves or exogenous administration of the transmitter (Burnstock, 1977). Now let us become more detailed in our analysis of data which has been obtained from the functional approach and which serves as the prerequisite for recognition of neurogenic type of regulation of local CBF.
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In order to study the role of the neurogenic mechanism of regulation of cerebral blood supply, vascular denervation or stimulation of the sympathetic system is employed. In obtaining experimental data diverse interpretations have been made. Bilateral sympathectomy in monkeys led to an increase of blood flow volume velocity in the frontal-temporal area (Harper, 1972). Considerable increase in CBF was noted also in experiments on cats an hour after the removal of the superior cervical ganglion (Teplov, 1980). While vascular denervation resulted in no disturbance of autoregulation, but shifted the course of its curve to the left. This enhances the possibility of cerebral blood supply regulation as arterial pressure falls and impairs it at it elevates. (Teplov, 1980). A large number of studies were undertaken utilizing electrical stimulation of the sympathetic nerves. Basic data is analyzed and summed up in the papers published in the Proceedings of a Symposium held in Iowa in 1981 (Eds.: D.Heistad and M.Marcus). Most of the investigators consider the cerebral vascular responses to electrical stimulation of the sympathetic system to be considerably less pronounced than of other vascular beds. The stimulatory effect manifested itself in diverse ways in various species of animals. For example, under normal conditions, sympathetic stimulation causes decrease in blood flow in primates (Heistad et al., 1978) and rabbits (Sadoshima et al., 1981) up to by 20% of the original value, while in dogs and cats this does not occur. It has been demonstrated that in rabbits and monkeys the sympathetic stimulation reduces CBF at the beginning and within 2-5 min, in spite of the stimulation being continued, blood flow returns to the initial level (Sercombe et al., 1979; Marcus et al., 1979). It is very clear that the method used for recording of CBF is crucial. If the measurement is made by clearance of some inert gases which takes several minutes for each trial, it is quite likely that the stimulation effect will not be detected at all. This seems to be the reason for the controversial interpretations of the effect of sympathetic stimulation on the cerebral blood circulation (James et al., 1969; Harper et al., 1972). In many laboratories it has been shown that electrical stimulation of the sympathetic system suppresses the CBF increase at an abrupt elevation of systemic arterial pressure (Bill, Linder, 1976; Edvinsson et al., 1978). The increase in local CBF (in response to hypertension) is more apparent and clear-cut in the gray matter than in the white, and the same ratio is maintained in regards to the effect of electrical stimulation of sympathetic system (Heistad et al., 1982). The authors believe that during acute hypertension, electrical sympathetic stimulation suppresses the passive drive of blood flow after systemic arterial pressure, which then safeguards the disruption of the bloodbrain barrier. Experiments carried out on cats Auer et al. (1982) have shown that electrical stimulation of the sympathetic nerves lead to constriction of the pial arteries. The large arteries appeared to be considerably more constricted than the small ones. However, under the same stimulation while blocking the alpha-adrenoreceptors which was induced by phenoxybenzamine no constriction occurred. But by blocking the beta-adrenoreceptors the stimulation nevertheless led to constriction of large vessels, although small ones remained virtually unaltered. By evaluating the data on the constriction of the pial arteries in cats which occurs with electrical stimulation of the sympathetic nerves (Wei et al., 1975; Kuschinsky, Wahl, 1975; Auer et al., 1982) Busija et al. (1982) have made reasonably conclusion that such constriction should then lead to a marked decrease in blood flow volume velocity. This
Main Theories of Autoregulation of CBF
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phenomenon has not as yet been observed (Alm, Bill, 1973; Bosivert et al., 1977; Heistad et al., 1978). Most authors consider that there exist some compensatory mechanisms which support the steadiness of cerebral blood circulation, (Harper et al., 1972). Looking to evaluate such mechanisms, Busija et al. (1982) made a simultaneous recording of the diameter of the pial arteries and CBF linear velocity during electrical stimulation of the sympathetic nerve. Constriction of the pial arteries (at invariable SAP) appeared to be accompanied by an increase in blood flow linear velocity and as a result, volume velocity remained unaltered. The authors arrived at the conclusion that an increase in blood flow linear velocity is due to a decrease in peripheral resistance at the expense of dilation of the smallest arteries. At the end of past century it has been demonstrated that during sympathetic stimulation, constriction of the pial veins is more pronounced than of the pial arteries (Auer, Johansson, 1980; Auer et al.,1981), while at the same time considerable changes occur in the intracranial pressure, shifting the production of the CSF, blood volume and blood flow in the brain (Edvinsson, McKenzie, 1976; Auer et al.,1981, 1982). The existence of cholinergic innervation of the pial arteries, has already been shown. Its proof is found both in histochemical and electron microscopical studies (Lavrentieva et al.,1968; Edvinsson et al., 1972; Denn, Stone, 1976; Motavkin, Vlasov, 1976; Motavkin et al.,1981). It is known that the perivascular cholinergic fibers run in parallel to the sympathetic fibers and it is assumed that both systems do allow for possible interaction. In addition it should be taken into account that the distance between the adrenergic and cholinergic terminals in pial vessels does not exceed 25 nm (Nielsen et al., 1975). Pharmacologically it has been demonstrated that cholinomimetics (acetylcholine and nicotine) may inhibit the release of noradrenaline from the sympathetic terminals. Studies in vivo utilizing intracarotid injection of carbochol succeeded in confirming the inhibitory action of the cholinomimetics on the brain sympathetic vasoconstriction (Aubineau et al., 1980). In a similar study with acetylcholine Alberch and Baguenna (1980) also confirmed this hypothesis. Additional review of these experiments again verified that acetylcholine released from the perivascular cholinergic terminals may inhibit the effect of sympathetically induced cerebral vasoconstriction (Sercombe, Wahl., 1982). Ascribing a dilatory function to the parasympathetic cholinergic innervation of cerebral vessels is the most debatable question in the neurogenic theory of regulation of cerebral blood circulation. As was previously pointed out, parasympathetic innervation of cerebral vessels occurs by way of the facial nerve; but there are other cranial nerves as well, namely the third, ninth and tenth (Vasquez, Purves, 1979). Stimulation of the facial nerve brings about dilation of the pial arteries (Chorobski, Penfield, 1932; D'Alecy, Rose, 1977), although, other authors have failed to obtain such effects by stimulation (Stjernschants, Bill, 1978; Busija, Heistad, 1980). In the studies of Linder (1981) the facial nerve of rabbits were transsected on one side. Experiments were done without electrical stimulation. Transsection appeared not to disturb the vasodilatory tone under conditions of both normotension and hypertension, thus autoregulation was fully maintained. Further electrical stimulation of the facial nerve on the intact side did not lead to any changes in total or local blood flow in the brain. Note that the blood flow intensity was measured by use of injections of microspheres.
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In contrast to Linder's data, in the experiments of Mchedlishvili and Nikolaishvili (1970) a blockade was induced by atropine to the cholinergic receptors which led to a complete disruption of autoregulatory dilatation of the pial arteries. It is from this finding that the authors concluded that the cholinergic nervous mechanism in regulation of cerebral blood supply plays the leading role. The authors understand that to hold this view is quite diametrically opposed to exested theories: "... Cholinergic nerves do not seem to produce dilation by a direct effect on smooth muscle ..." (Duckles, 1982, p..445). Several works could be cited, some proving, others rejecting the role of cholinergic neural mechanism in regulation of cerebral blood circulation (Reynier-Rebuffel et al., 1979; Aubineau et al., 1980; Klugman et al., 1980; Owman et al., 1980; Bevan et al., 1982; Busija, Heistad, 1982, Zhang et al., 2002; Claassen, Jansen, 2006). Such discrepancies in experimental findings in relation to the role of cholinergic mechanism and generally in regards to the neurogenic mechanism in regulation of cerebral blood supply ought to be sought primarily, in the incorrect methodical approach. The majorities of the studies described in this chapter were undertaken with the use of discrete methods for the measurement of blood flow volume velocity (clearance of inert gases, method of microspheres) and utilized the values of the lumen of the pial arteries. Therefore, independent of the mode of influence used, be it pharmacological (administration of adrenoor cholinergic agonists or antagonists) or nonpharmacological (denervation or electrical stimulation of the sympathetic or parasympathetic systems), the experimenter is obliged to record the static characteristics rather than the required dynamic ones. This essential limitation attends the use of the available quantitative methods for blood flow measurement.
Chapter III
ANALYSIS OF DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF LOCAL CBF AUTOREGULATION In previous chapters we have repeatedly pointed out that for a correct analysis (and later on for synthesis too) of the system of regulation in general and autoregulation of local CBF in particular it is quite necessary to obtain dynamic characteristics of the process under study. In this chapter we will address the basic results that our work has yielded with a goal of obtaining and analyzing the dynamic characteristics of local CBF autoregulation. Electrochemical generation of hydrogen is the method (Stosseck, Lubbers, Cottin, 1974) employed for local CBF recording.
3.1. ANALYSIS OF THE DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF LOCAL CBF AUTOREGULATION IN CASE OF SHORT-LASTING SAP CHANGES Technique Utilized in Local CBF Autoregulation Studies Experiments were carried out in cats of either sex. The electrode of the construction described above was placed on the surface of the cerebral cortex (its contact pressure was up to 1 g/square cm). Pressor influences caused by ballooning of the inferior vena cava (hypotension) and/or abdominal aorta (hypertension). In each experiment the electrode position for local CBF measurement variated 5-10 times. The number of influences (SAP changes) was determined by the character and pronounceness of the vascular responses and made up from 3 to 12-15. Study on each animal was made by means of 3 different electrodes. Vascular reactivity testing was done by the gas mixture with 8% CO2. The obtained curves in the process of treatment were divided into pairs coupled with local CBF and SAP curves. For the sake of convenience of data processing the SAP curve was approximated to mean systemic arterial pressure (MSAP) curve. In the course of all
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experiments we have done analysis of more than 3000 pairs coupled with MSAP and local CBF curves. The results of the analysis of the data which was generalized for all animals, electrodes and influences have shown that local CBF dynamics and, consequently the vascular responses to SAP variation are not identical. It has been established that saccadic changes in SAP result in the following five types of local CBF changes (Figures 3-6).
Figure 3. Dynamic characteristics of local cerebral blood flow (1) autoregulation during systemic arterial pressure (2) alteration. Responses type 1.
Figure 4. Dynamic characteristics of local cerebral blood flow (1) autoregulation during systemic arterial pressure (2) alteration. Responses type 2 (A,B) and type 3 (C,D).
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Figure 5. Dynamic characteristics of local cerebral blood flow (1) autoregulation during systemic arterial pressure (2) alteration. Responses type 4 (A,B,C) and type 5 (D).
Figure 6. Dynamic characteristics of local cerebral blood flow (1) autoregulation during systemic arterial pressure (2) alteration. Regularities: "a" (A,B); "b" (C) and "c" (D).
1. Fall in local CBF in response to SAP elevation and its rise in response to SAP attenuation (Figure 3). 2. Negligible increase (or invariability) of local CBF during elevation of SAP and a marked decrease in lCBF during SAP attenuation (Figure 4A, B). 3. A marked increase in local CBF during SAP elevation and its insignificant attenuation (or invariability) during a fall in SAP (Figure 4C, D). 4. Almost invariable local CBF both during increase and decrease of SAP (Figure 5AC). 5. When local CBF passively follows both the increase and decrease of SAP occurs (Figure 5D).
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The following regularities appeared to be characteristic of local CBF autoregulation: a) The mode of reaction, as well as its level (within one mode) depends on the amplitude and duration of a disturbing influence of SAP (Figure 6A, B); b) The local CBF is less susceptible to the influence of rapid, high-speed changes in SAP and has the tendency to follow in a passive way its slow changes (Figure 6C); c) Changes in the local CBF get attenuated from influence to influence by the repetition of the latter (Figure 6D). By utilizing purely pressor influences on the system of cerebral circulation no changes in local CBF were observed which could not enter the above mentioned classification. Since all changes that occur in local CBF are apparently influenced by the relevant responses of the regulating blood vessels, then from the point of view of autoregulation of the vascular responses its classification would look like this: Type 1 response: excessive vasoconstricting reaction to an increase in intravascular pressure (IVP) and excessive vasodilatory reaction to a decrease in IVP. Type 2 response: pronounced constricting autoregulatory reaction to an increase in IVP and a weak dilatatory response (or lack of it) to a decrease in IVP. Type 3 response: weak constricting autoregulatory reaction (or lack of it) to an increase in IVP and pronounced dilatory reaction to a decrease in IVP. Type 4 response: equally well pronounced autoregulatory reactions both to an increase and decrease in IVP. Type 5 response: equally poor autoregulatory reactions (or their absence) both to an increase and decrease in IVP. Regularities in the autoregulatory vascular responses: a) Expression of autoregulatory responses depends on both the amplitude and duration of the disturbing changes in IVP; b) Autoregulatory responses develop preferentially in response to rapid changes in IVP, whereas slow changes in IVP are not accompanied by such reactions; c) If the vessel is subject to a sequence of similar types of changes in IVP, then autoregulation is accomplished more effectively during the subsequent events rather than with the first one. It should be pointed out that it is assumed that there is a direct proportional dependence between SAP and the pressure inside some blood vessel (P): P = A x SAP
(1)
where the coefficient of proportionality A<1 and depends, in particular, on the caliber of the examined blood vessel. Statistical processing of data has revealed that the probability of observation in the given tissues microregion of the cerebral cortex on the autoregulatory responses of one or another type is distributed among individual types of responses in the following way (see Table 2). It becomes evident from the presented table, that there exists a relatively smooth gradation in the autoregulatory capacity of the vessels - from overtly pronounced to overtly weak. At the same time, we failed to detect any correlation between the degree of expression
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of autoregulatory vascular reactions and the initial level of SAP in animals, therefore the probability of observing reactions is not dependent on the initial level of SAP. Table 2. Distribution of the individual types of autoregulatory responses Type of vascular responses 1 2 3 4 5
Probability of its observation (P<0.01) 0.209±0.034 0.213±0.035 0.187±0.030 0.248±0.030 0.143±0.027
Reproducibility of reactions of any type under repeated influence makes up 100%. This implies of course the reproducibility of the type of reaction and not its concrete pattern. Thus, the studies described above have demonstrated equivocality of vascular reactions in response to the same type pressor influence, under almost constant experimental conditions. Such nonhomogeneity of the vascular responses may be due, for example, to the difference in the mechanism responsible for them or else the difference in some initial conditions determining functioning of one and the same mechanism subserving the vascular responses. In the first case the indicated reactions would be described to be quite different from each others equations in terms of the principles of functioning of different mechanisms in the vascular activity. While in the other case, there should be only one equation (or a system of equations) describing the functioning of one basic mechanism of vascular responses, which, depending on some initial conditions, is capable of providing the development of any of the above inumerated types of autoregulatory reactions. With a view to construct such a mathematical model we have made a preliminary generalized analysis of the data found in the literature concerning the autoregulatory processes during alterations in the values of blood pressure and the properties of individual blood vessels. The net result is formulated as follows: 1. The majority of vessels, which are generally capable of active vasomotor reactions, are affected during variations in the IVP value (Johnson, 1964; Konradi, 1973; Mchedlishvili, 1980). 2. Active autoregulatory reactions appear to be particularly clear-cut when there is a sufficiently rapid variation of blood pressure, while during slow changes in pressure, the onset of autoregulation is delayed or does not manifest itself at all (Johansson, Mellander, 1975; Mellander, 1977; Smiesko et al.,1978; Richard et al., 2001). 3. During the first stage of the process of autoregulation the operation is controlled by the myogenic mechanism, when the vascular response is determined by a direct reaction of the smooth muscle elements of the vascular wall to IVP changes (Johnson, 1964; Zelikson, 1973; Baez, 1977; Lombard, Duling, 1977; Tada, 1978; Purves, 1978; Mitagvaria, 1983). 4. Magnitude of the myogenic vascular tone is directly proportional to the value of IVP (Johnson, 1964; Johansson, Bohr, 1966; Uchida, Bohr, 1969; Baez, 1977; Mellander, 1977; Grande, Mellander, 1978), and is altered in accordance with the change of the
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latter, the velocity of change in the myogenic tension of the vascular wall being directly proportional to the velocity of IVP change (Sigurdsson, Johansson, Mellander, 1977; Grande, Mellander, 1978, Mitagvaria, 1983). 5. Effectiveness of the myogenic mechanism of autoregulation is likely to be limited by quite a definite value of myogenic tension, finite for each particular vessel (Johnson, 1964; Uchida, Bohr, 1969; Herzmeyer, 1973; Johansson, Mellander, 1975). 6. In the case where the capacity of blood vessel for active reactions are not taken into account, its wall behaves as a visco-elastic body, that is, it has the property of elasticity and viscosity (Bergel, 1961; Fung, 1967; Hoffman, Bassett, Bartelstone, 1968). These statements are by no means exhaustive of all the details of the process of autoregulation. Only those findings which are concrete and experimentally substantiated are presented here. They are the prerequisites upon which the underlying equations are based and upon which the model of blood vessel was constructed (Begiashvili, Meladze, Mitagvaria, 1979a, 1979b, 1980).
Description of a Mathematical Model of a Blood Vessel A comprehensive analysis of all cumulative characteristics of local CBF autoregulation, which was obtained by taking into account the above statements, generalizing data available in the literature, thus permitted us to formulate a number of conclusions: 1. The reaction of blood vessels to IVP alteration is determined by a passive (elastic stretch of the vessel wall), Pe, and active (tension developed by contraction of smooth muscle cells), Pa, components of tension developed by the vessel wall, Pv, that is: Pv(t) = Pe(t) + Pa(t) = kR(t) + Pa(t)
(2)
where R(t) is the vessel radius; k is the modulus of the vascular wall elasticity; t is time. 2. Active tension of the vascular wall occurs at any increase in IVP (P), if the velocity of the latter exceeds some threshold value V or is equal to it. While any decrease in IVP with the velocity exceeding the threshold or being equal to it results in suppression of active tension of the vascular wall. That is, variation of active tension occurs only in the intervals of time (ti) when: |dP(ti)/dt| >= V
(3)
3. Velocity of active tension alteration of the vascular wall is directly proportional to the velocity inducing their variation in IVP: dPa(t)/dt = bdP(t)/dt
(4)
where b is a coefficient of proportionality, determined apparently by the current state of contractile apparatus of the vascular wall.
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4. Velocity of active tension variation of the vascular wall has some limit, B, that is: |dPa(t)/dt| <= B
(5)
This deduction was reached by common physiological viewpoints about the ultimate velocity of paired mechanoelectric processes in smooth muscle cells. 5. The value of active tension developed by the vascular wall may vary from zero up to a maximal value (let us designate it as P*), defined, apparently, by the properties of the contractile smooth muscle apparatus of the vascular wall and its current functional state: 0 <= Pa(t) <= P*
(6)
6. A vessel behaves as a visco-elastic body with fixed parameters - elasticity coefficient k and viscosity coefficient ρ, obeying the following equation: c . ρ . dR(t)/dt + k*R(t) + Pa(t) = P(t)
(7)
where c is a coefficient determined apparently by the vessel geometry. Strictly speaking, positions 2-6 are applicable in full measure only to myogenically active vessels, though data available in the literature on the myogenic activity is a common property of all regulatory vessels (Brandt, Enzenross, 1976; Baez, 1977; Aubineau, Lusamvuku, Sercombe, 1978; Orlov, 1980) provide definite grounds for applying these contentments if not to all, at least to the majority of blood vessels actively contributing to the process of regulation of tissue blood flow. Thus, the system of equations offered by us which describes the autoregulatory capabilities of blood vessels reactions to IVP changes looks like this: c . ρ . dR(t)/dt + kR(t) + Pa(t) = P(t) Pa(t) = Pa(t1, t2,..., ti,...tn-1) + b*$tn dP(tn)/dt dt 0 <= Pa(t) <= P* dP(ti) >= V, i = 1, 2,..., n dPa(t) <= B
(8)
where ti is integration time for i-th change in IVP; (n-1) is the number of preceding changes in IVP; n is the ordinal of the IVP change under consideration. In order to obtain the solution to the system of equations (8) it is usually impeded because of the necessity to reflect in this solution the cumulative IVP changes, preceding the change to be considered. Though one may obtain, in an analytical way, a number of solutions for definite initial conditions and for the simplest changes in pressure (leap, sinusoid, etc). Then, by presenting voluntary change in IVP as the sum of its simplest changes, we can
Nodar P. Mitagvaria and Hiam I. Bicher
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obtain in the sum of separate solutions the expression described under the given initial conditions a vascular reaction to this voluntary pressure change.
Results of Modeling The system of equations (8) described above was realized on a computer that enabled us to obtain solutions for any IVP variation under any initial conditions (Begiashvili, Meladze, Mitagvaria, 1979b, 1980). Investigations on the model have demonstrated the following: 1. Any variation of IVP mean level, superimposed on its pulsatile variations, will exert an influence on the value of active vascular tension Pa. In reality, this is not the case. It would be more accurate to speak not of the velocity limitation inherent in the mechanism of autoregulation, but of its limited susceptibility. 2. Characteristics of autoregulatory vascular reactions are to a great extent conditioned by the value of its original vascular tone: at low tone, vascular capacity for dilation is attenuated, while during constriction it is facilitated; while at high initial tone, facilitation is the reaction of dilation and attenuated is the vascular capacity for constriction. This conclusion is supported by experimental findings of other investigators as well. They have demonstrated that during reduction of initial tone (usually achieved by administration of pharmacological agents) vascular capacity for dilatory reactions sharply falls or disappears, whereas its capacity for constriction is invariable or is even enhanced (Levtov, 1967; Levtov, Parolla, 1969; Konradi, 1973). At the same time, enhancement of initial tone brings about an opposite effect (Pugachev, 1947; Haddy, Scott, 1965; Parolla, Mikhailova, 1967; Meyers, Honig, 1969). Variation in the limits of autoregulation during sympathectomy may also be considered as proof of the role played by the initial vascular tone in the development of the process of autoregulation (Ponte, Purves, 1974; Fitch, MacKenzie, Harper, 1975; HernandezPerez, Raichle, Stone, 1975). 3. In order to consider the initial values of active tension of vessels, Table 2 is reconstructed in the following way (see Table 3). Table 3. Distribution of the initial value of the vascular walls active tension Initial value of ative tension of vascular wall (Pa) Minimal or close to it (type 2 reaction) Mean or close to it (type 1 or 4 reaction) Maximal or close to it (type 3 reaction) Lack of vascular activity (type 5 reaction)
Percentage of vessels possessing given value of Pa (P<0.001) 21.3±0.035 45.7±0.034 18.7±0.030 14.3±0.027
Judging from the presented results of statistical analysis, we found that in our experiments there is a relatively smooth gradation of values of vascular tone from the minimal to maximal depending on the predominance of its mean value. This inference is indirectly corroborated by data on spatial distribution of local blood flow in the brain (Morgalev, Demchenko, 1979), indicating that this distribution is uneven. According to these
Analysis of Dynamic Characteristics of Local CBF Autoregulation
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findings, blood flow value in separate microregions of the cerebral cortex varies from 0.2 ml/g/min (what apparently corresponds to a high value of vascular tone) to 2.30 ml/g/min (a low level of vascular tone) with a marked predominance of mean values (0.4-1.2 ml/g/min). It should be emphasized that "specific weight" of maximal and minimal values of blood flow is quite in line with the evidence presented in Table 3, supporting the inferences made by us concerning the uneven distribution of the initial value of vascular tone within the cortical vessels. It is very clear that such distributions determine efficacious autoregulation of total cerebral blood flow both during elevation and reduction of IVP, with some tendency toward "preference" to the elevated pressure, which is evidenced by the presence of a greater number of vessels with minimal or close to minimal value of tone than with maximal. 4. Autoregulatory reactions in the vascular bed must occur step-by-step. Each subsequent part of the vessel must come into the process of autoregulation when the amplitude of disturbance cannot be compensated for by virtue of the preceding part of the vessel. This is corroborated by data which according to the augmentation of the amplitude of pressure change in autoregulation are involved successively the major, the pial (Mchedlishvili, 1968; Mchedlishvili, Mitagvaria, Ormotsadze, 1972) and, perhaps, the intracerebral arteries (Mchedlishvili, Mitagvaria, Ormotsadze, 1980). Such hierarchy in the process of autoregulation is likely to lead to cases when excess reaction to pressure influence of one section of the vascular tree elicits an opposite reaction in another section. Such cases have been described in the literature in detail (Carlyle, Grayson, 1955; Mchedlishvili, 1960, 1968, Toyoda et al., 1996). Proceeding from the fact that in our experiments the induced changes in the system of blood circulation were merely related to pressure and they appeared to be too short-standing to lead to any considerable shifts in chemical composition of the vascular environment, we thought that direct participation of a metabolic factor needed to be ruled out in the observed autoregulation. This is clearly evidenced by the course of typical dynamic characteristics - we have never observed blood flow increases (wash-out of dilatory factors) which were not first preceded by vessel constriction, or by its decrease (accumulation of dilatory factors) forewarning the dilation of vessels. We can conceive of an indirect influence of a metabolic factor on these reactions via metabolic parameters of the environment on the functional characteristics of the described mechanism - such as values of P*, coefficient b and, most likely, the level of the original vascular tone Pa(0). In this case the metabolic factor is not directly involved in autoregulation, but helps to identify the degree of its pronouncement. This area involves short pressure variations as we used in our sets of experiments described above. It is more likely that under a longer disturbed change in the metabolic content of the environment they actively interfere with the course of autoregulation (but this question will be dealt with below). In addition, under our experimental conditions, autoregulatory events started to develop simultaneously with the onset of pressure effect and were over as soon as IVP attained a stable level. Numerous experimental findings testifying to the existence of myogenic vascular tone (Johnson, 1964; Johansson, Bohr, 1966; Uchida, Bohr, 1969; Brandt, Enzenross, 1976; Baez, 1977; Aubineau et al.,1978; Tada, 1978; Smiesko et al.,1978; Vinall, Simeone, 1982, Lam et al., 1998; Kaley, 2000; Ahn et al., 2007) and, the dependence of its value on the mechanical effect on the vascular wall (Sparks, 1964; Johansson, Bohr, 1966; Johansson,
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Mellander, 1975; Mellander, 1977; Vinall, Simeone, 1982) suggest namely such a pattern of myogenic vascular responses to IVP variation, since these responses were shown to be related primarily to the velocity of pressure changes (Mellander, 1977; Sigurdsson, Johansson, Mellander, 1977; Grande, Mellander, 1979). Myogenic vascular responses in relation to pressure velocity changes are many times greater than those occurring at a gradual smooth pressure elevation, or at a stable pressure (Mellander, 1977). Therefore, we believe that the predominant role of the myogenic factor in the formation of the mechanism of autoregulation described is apparent. In the above findings which the mechanism describes the vascular active contraction appears to be in many ways similar for both the vessels in vitro and the isolated vessels when all mechanisms except for the myogenic mechanism is ruled out. However, such "instant" action of the myogenic mechanism, during which time of development of the vascular responses is restricted to the time of IVP velocity changes, accounts, apparently, for the sufficient effectiveness of this mechanism only under conditions of comparatively rapid and brief "impulses" of pressure similar to those used in our experiments. And if changes in pressure can be compensated for by the myogenic vascular responses, then under conditions of slow pressure changes and also under sustained elevation or fall of pressure, a possible insufficiency of the level of active myogenic tension could develop during the pressure elevation. Therefore, it is more than likely that the myogenic "dynamic" reaction to IVP changes are accompanied and reinforced by functions of other mechanisms as well, which assume special value after the stabilization of pressure on a new level, and when the activity of the myogenic mechanism is attenuated (Mellander, 1977).
3.2. DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF AUTOREGULATION OF CEREBRAL BLOOD SUPPLY IN RESPONSE TO PROLONGED VARIATIONS IN SYSTEMIC ARTERIAL PRESSURE In order to evaluate the function of the autoregulatory neurogenic mechanism of cerebral blood flow, we have carried out series of several experiments on cats during prolonged stepwise changes in SAP. In contrast to the above described data obtained during shortlasting SAP changes, it appears that during prolonged SAP changes (Table 4) two more components become involved in the process of autoregulation. The reason for their emergence is determined by conditions of the experiment itself (whether the animal is anesthetized or not, what the length of disturbance is, whether adren- and cholinergic blocking agents are used or not). Various latent periods manifested different components of autoregulation and served as a basis to distinguish them from each other with more than 0.999 reliability. Let us consider reasonableness of this differentiation.
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Table 4. Parameters of prolonged changes of the Mean Systemic Arterial Pressure Parameters of mean systemic arterial pressure Initial level (mm Hg) Elevated level (mm Hg) Lowered level (mm Hg) Length of exposure (seconds)
The state of the animal Preliminary ether anesthesia, Nembutal anesthesia local anesthesia (40mg/kg) 116±2.2 102±1.5 150±2.0 163±2.5 70±2.1 57±1.3 124±13.5 265±14.3
Figure 7. Local cerebral blood flow (lCBF) variations with "splashes", counterphase to the direction of systemic arterial pressure (SAP) alterations.
Figure 8. Local cerebral blood flow deviation from the original level and its short latent period regulation during decrease (A) and increase (B) in systemic arterial pressure.
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In the first series of experiments (with no anesthesia) two components of autoregulation were distinctly delineated: 1) operating concomitantly with the onset of pressure influences (described by us in the previous chapter), whose characteristics appear to be in close correlation with the dynamic phase of SAP fluctuation and for which the most characteristic is the pattern of local CBF variation with "splashes", counterphase to the direction of SAP fluctuation (Figure 7), and 2) manifesting itself only in the case when as a result of SAP change local CBF deviates from the original level and characterized by a short latent period and comparatively rapid completion of the reactions mediated by it (Figure 8). Mean values of latencies and times of reaction completion are given in Table 5. Both components are displayed with equal probability, both during increase and decrease in SAP, frequency of their manifestation is high enough - on an average 60% (see Table 6). At the same time, in a number of cases (Figure 9) CBF pattern in response to stepwise changes in SAP verified the third component which was latent in its time of completed reaction and its involvement of the autoregulatory process. (see Table 5). The frequency in observing this component in the series of experiments without anesthesia is 8.5% which is insufficient to be excluded from consideration. Of course, one could assume that for one or another reason a modified manifestation of the second component may occur. Yet, there are cases of joint occurrence of both components (Figure 10). In addition, the difference in temporal characteristics of the second and third components under one and the same conditions appear to be statistically significant, p < 0.002 (see Table 5).
Figure 9. Manifestation of the first and third components of local cerebral blood flow autoregulation in two adjacent microareas of the brain during decrease in SAP.
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Table 5. Mean temporal characteristics of components of the local CBF autoregulation Conditions of the experiment
Increase of SAP
Decrease of SAP
With anesthesia Without anesthesia With anesthesia Without anesthesia
Component 1 Latent Time of period (s) reaction termination 0 Coincides with duration of 0 dynamic phase of 0 SAP alteration 0
Component 2 Latent Time of period (s) reaction termination 11.2±1.7 32.5±3.7
Component 3 Latent Time of period (s) reaction termination 81.2±7.0 94.5±10.0
31.0±2.5
54.0±2.6
92.0±6.6
113.0±7.8
6.0±0.7
13.6±0.7
49.0±3.3
72.0±3.6
24.0±2.1
43.0±4.5
57.0±2.2
80.0±3.1
Figure 10. Manifestation of the second and third components of lCBF autoregulation during decrease in SAP.
In the results of our second series of experiments, with the use of anesthesia, the existence of the third, slow component of autoregulation is proven. In these experiments, frequency in observation of the third component is dramatically increased (from 8.5 to 55.2% - see Table 6). What is most important, is its temporal characteristics which appear not to differ from those obtained in the first series of experiments: the level of reliability makes up 0.2 < p < 0.5 for latent period and 0.1 < p < 0.2 for the time of reaction completion. Consequently, it may be concluded that in both cases we are dealing with the manifestation of the very same component of the local CBF autoregulation process.
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Table 6. Frequency of manifestatition of the autoregulatory components in anethetised an unanesthetised animals Mode of influence Increase in SAP Decrease in SAP Frequency (independent of direction of SAP changes)
Without anesthesia With anesthesia Without anesthesia With anesthesia Without anesthesia With anesthesia
Frequency of Manifestation (%) Component 1 Component 2 Component 3 60.6 60.8 11.7 65.1 7.3 57.8 62.7 56.4 7.3 67.7 5.3 52.6 61.4 58.6 8.5 66.4 6.3 55.2
Following the application of anesthesia, frequency of manifestation of the second component of autoregulation falls from 58.6 to 6.3%. At the same time a statistically significant alteration in its temporal characteristics are observed, indicating a slow down, attenuation of the action of this component of autoregulation. Also in this case after observation of successive manifestations of the all three components (Figure 11) one can not then assume a disappearance in the given conditions of the first one. The use of anesthesia does not affect the frequency of manifestation of the first component.
Figure 11. Manifestation of the all three components of lCBF autoregulation.
Based on this information it is possible to conclude that in the process of local CBF autoregulation three components may be involved. The first component manifests itself with equal probability both in anesthetized and unanesthetized animals irrespective of the direction of SAP changes. Second, the component of autoregulation is well expressed in unanesthetized animals and that by administering anesthesia it strongly diminishes the probability of its emergence. There are rare cases in which observations have been made and a slow-down (retardation) or impairment of its action occurs. The temporal characteristics of the third, slow component of autoregulation does not actually depend on the action of anesthesia, but anesthesia markedly increases the probability of its observation. Let us attempt to establish which mechanism of the vascular activity (or local CBF regulation) underlies the manifestation of each of these components of autoregulation.
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In investigating the concept of a possible neurogenic nature of the described second component of autoregulation, sets of experiments with the use of adren- and cholinergic blocking agents were performed. Blocking agents were chosen: phentolamine, phenoxybenzamine, propranolol and scopolamine.
The Role of Adrenergic System Phentolamine is the most commonly used antagonist of alpha-adrenoreceptors. It acts almost equally effectively on α1- and α2-receptors (Langer, 1981). Although phentolamine penetrates poorly the blood-brain barrier (Anden, Strombom, 1974), when it is introduced intraperitoneally or intravenously in high enough doses it inhibits α-adrenergic transmission in the brain (Langer, 1981). In our experiments, intravenous injections of 0.5 mg/kg phentolamine against the background of stable initial level of SAP led to the abolishment of the second component of autoregulation under SAP elevation (Figure 12, see dynamics of local CBF1 and CBF2 prior to and 30 min after phentolamine injection). It should be noted that the first component of autoregulation, that of the manifestation of the myogenic mechanism, was completely maintained (Figure 12, local CBF3).
Figure 12. Dynamics of local blood flow in three microregions of the brain cortex during SAP elevation prior to (A) and 30 min after (B) phentolamine injection.
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Figure 13. Autoregulatory characteristics obtained in three microregions of the brain cortex by the phentolamine action in response to both decrease (A) and increase (B) in SAP.
Presented in Figure 13 are the autoregulatory curves which were obtained by the phentolamine action in response to both decrease and increase in SAP. It is interesting to note that along all the channels of recording, i.e. in all microregions of the cerebral cortex under study, the second component of autoregulatory vasodilation persists (Figure 13A), whereas the component of vasoconstrictive character is abolished altogether (Figure 13B), which leads to a distinct manifestation of the third, slow component, which at its own expense, is autoregulatory vasoconstriction. A similar situation is observed when one uses another α-adrenoblocker phenoxybenzamine. This is a potent antagonist of α1-adrenoreceptors. In Figure 14 (a twochannel recording of local CBF) one can see a gradual replacement of the second component of autoregulation by the third, following the phenoxybenzamine injection (1-1.5 mg/kg). While studying the transient processes of autoregulation of the cerebral blood supply Teplov (1980) also found a fast component (analogous to the second component described above): Assuming it was neurogenic in nature, he excluded α-adrenoreceptor vessels as the terminal link of the neurogenic vasomotor reaction of any origin. In observing the action of dihydroergotamine (1 mg/kg, in the carotid artery) a fast phase of autoregulation under pressure elevation was not observed. During almost 51 seconds, the CBF was traceable by a high level of pressure followed by a classic reaction of autoregulation (Teplov, 1980, p.18). In our opinion, the data described clearly illustrates the neurogenic (α-adrenergic) nature of the second component of autoregulatory vasoconstriction under elevation of SAP.
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Figure 14. Replacement of the second component of autoregulation by the third, following the phenoxibenzamine injection. (A) - control, (B) - after phenoxibenzamine injection.
The role which the β-adrenergic system plays in regulating the cerebral blood supply is unclear. Based on indirect data Teplov et al. (1978) suggest that in the β-blockade (1-2 mg/kg propranolol, i/v) the constrictor effect induced by the vagus stimulation is enhanced. Therefore the β-receptors may be thought to participate in dilation of the cerebral vessels. According to Tada's (1978) findings, administration of β-adrenoblocking agents has no effect on prominence and temporal parameters of autoregulatory reactions. Studying the role of adrenergic innervation in the regulation of blood flow and energetic metabolism within the brain of anesthetized rats, Kogure et al.(1979) demonstrated that propranolol (10 mg/kg) induced blockade of β-adrenoreceptors results in a decrease utilization rate of highly energetic phosphates by 50% and a negligible decrease in the vascular resistance. The mentioned auythors believe that central adrenergic neurons play an important role in exercising a metabolic control over the cerebral blood circulation by means of its affect on the beta-adrenoreceptor vessels and on tissue cellular membranes. In an attempt to understand the effect of propranolol induced β-blockade on local CBF under conditions of normo- and hypercapnia Dahlgren (1981) experimented. Results showed that intravenous injection of the blocking agent in the dose of 2.5 mg/kg did not appear to lead to any appreciable alteration of local blood flow in any of the 22 examined structures of the rat brain. A negative result was obtained also under conditions of hypercapnia. It can be concluded that if propranolol does have any action on the regulation of cerebral circulation, it must be rather insignificant. In observing the conditions in the perfusion technique, the action of the β-blocking agents (propranolol and anapriline) on the feline and rabbit blood vessels, Gaevji (1980) contributed to the vasoconstrictive response and therefore considerably reduced the dilatory autoregulatory response of cerebral vessels to perfusion pressure fall. This is supported by the data of Fujishima (1971) and Meyer et al.(1971) and partly, with the above indicated findings of Teplov et al.(1978).
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The role of β-adrenergic system can be summed up in two statements: 1) the β-receptors participate in the dilation of cerebral vessels and their blockade contributes to a constrictor response, and 2) the β-adrenergic system plays no essential role in the regulation of the cerebral vascular tone. But results of our experiments on cats with i/v injection of propranolol (2-2.5 mg/kg) do not confirm the above statement. Data given in Figures 15 and 16 do not show improvement in vasoconstrictive autoregulation under SAP elevation. A well-pronounced autoregulatory response is seen in Figure 16C. Its temporal characteristics are attributable to the third, slowly acting component and are not considered to have the neurogenic nature.
Figure 15. The local blood flow dynamics in two microregions of cortex (CBF1, CBF2) during elevation of SAP prior (A) and after (B) propranolol injection.
Figure 16. The local blood flow dynamics in two microregions of cerebral cortex (CBF1, CNF2) during elevation of SAP. (A)- control, (B) - 3 min and (C) - 30 min after propranolol injection.
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Figure 17. Local blood flow autoregulatory responses in 4 microregions of the brain cortex during reduction in SAP under the action of propranolol.
Presented in Figure 17 are the autoregulatory responses (under the action of propranolol) which occurred as a reduction in SAP. Also in this case, it is difficult to conclude that betablockade improved the vasodilatory responses. In the third-channel recordings (CBF3) one can see a well expressed myogenic autoregulation. In these and other experimental findings obtained in our studies, the beta-adrenergic system does not seem to play significant role in the autoregulatory vasoconstriction or vasodilation of the cerebral vascular system.
The Role of the Cholinergic System In order to properly evaluate the role of the cholinergic system in its formation of the second component of autoregulatory vasodilation in response to a fall in SAP, we have given an i/v injection of a potent cholinergic blocking agent, scopolamine (1-1.5 mg/kg). In all experiments a clear-cut transformation of the second component into the third component was obtained. In Figure 18 an example of this transformation is given. A - before scopolamine injection (one can see how in response to a fall in SAP local CBF rapidly recovers its original level), B - 3 minutes after scopolamine i/v injection (latency of the local CBF response is approximately the same, but the process of restoration is more prolonged), C - 30 minutes after scopolamine injection (It is seen that autoregulation of local CBF is accomplished only by the third, slow component and there is an apparent increase in both the latency and the time of restoration of the local CBF initial level).
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Figure 18. Local cerebral blood flow autoregulatory responses during reduction in SAP: (A) - prior, (B) - 3 min and (C) - 30 min after scopolamine injection.
Presented in Figure 19 are the results of experiments which allowed us to make a comparison of the effects of the cholinergic receptors' blockade on the autoregulatory vasodilation and vasoconstriction. Data was obtained 45 minutes after an i/v injection of scopolamine. In two microregions of the cerebral cortex (CBF1 and CBF2) one sees the lack of the second component of autoregulation and functioning of the third, slow component. At the same time, in response to an abrupt increase of SAP there occurs a remarkable change in function of the second, fast component. With repetitive action, the described picture is reproduced in full.
Figure 19. Local blood flow autoregulatory responses in 2 microregions of the brain cortex during SAP alteration under the action of scopolamine.
Analysis of Dynamic Characteristics of Local CBF Autoregulation
55
Thus, by administration of a muscarinic cholinergic blocking agent, scopolamine, the most prominent peripheral action results in a complete exclusion of the second, fast component of autoregulatory vasodilation under a fall in SAP and has no effect whatsoever on the slow vasodilatory or fast vasoconstrictory components. Table 7 represents the frequency in manifestation in various components of local CBF autoregulation after administration of adreno- and cholinolytics. Table 7. The frequency of manifestation of different components of lCBF autoregulation after administration of adreno- and cholinolytics Experimental conditions Increasing of SAP Deacreasing of SAP
Components of autoregulation I II III I II III
Frequency of manifestation (%) of the autoregulatory components after injection of: Phentolamine Phenoxibenzamine Propranolol Scopolamine 58.1 60.0 55.2 64.1 2.2 4.0 49.5 59.2 48.0 80.2 14.9 7.5 62.3 61.2 57.1 61.2 40.5 67.3 53.2 8.3 13.4 13.5 11.8 84.2
In summary, the results which were derived from our experiments utilizing adreno- and cholinoreceptors blockade are as follows: 1. In experiments on unanesthetized cats the second, fast component of autoregulation reflects the functioning of the neurogenic mechanism. This mechanism mediates the autoregulatory vasoconstriction through the alpha-adrenergic system, and vasodilation - through the M-cholinergic system. 2. Exclusion of the neurogenic mechanism of autoregulation does not lead to the abolishment of autoregulation altogether. As pointed out above, in experiments where no anesthesia and no blockers were employed, the rate of manifestation of third, slow acting component of autoregulation averaged 8.5%. However, application of anesthesia, as well as the indicated blockers sharply increased the average frequency of manifestation of the given component up to the 55% (see Table 6 and 7). Anesthesia reduced the frequency of the manifestation of the second, neurogenic component from 58.6 to 6.3% (under application of adreno- and cholinoblockers, the frequency of manifestation of the neurogenic component virtually fell to zero). In Figure 20 one can well see the transformation of the dynamic characteristics of vasodilatory autoregulation of lCBF in three adjacent microregions of the cerebral cortex under nembutal anesthesia (40 mg/kg). Under the invariable position of the measuring electrode, observations were made. Latency of development in the vasodilatory autoregulation and time of its completion are presented in Table 5. A similar picture is observed also in the case of autoregulatory vasoconstriction. Such vasoconstriction presented in Figure 21 was derived from four adjacent microregions of the cerebral cortex under conditions of anesthesia.
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Nodar P. Mitagvaria and Hiam I. Bicher
Figure 20. Transformation of the dynamic characteristics of vasodilatory autoregulation of lCBF in three adjacent microregions of the cerebral cortex under nembutal anesthesia. (A) - prior, (B) - after nembutal injection.
It should be particularly pointed out that under all experimental conditions the temporal characteristics of the slow component appear to be almost similar. This is an additional confirmation that in all cases we continue to deal with the very same mechanism of autoregulation.
Figure 21. Local blood flow autoregulatory responses in 4 adjacent microregions of the cerebral cortex during SAP elevation under the action of nembutal.
Hence, from the dynamic characteristics of the three components of autoregulation we have singled out the first two as representing the myogenic and neurogenic links. Evaluation of the available literature presented in section 2.2 shows that the third slow component of the autoregulatory process may be only metabolic in nature.
Chapter IV
STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION IN THE BRAIN BLOOD SUPPLY AUTOREGULATION After analyzing the dynamic characteristics of autoregulation of the brain blood supply, clearly three mechanisms of vascular activity are involved in this process. They are: 1) myogenic, 2) neurogenic and 3) metabolic. Under normal conditions (no anesthesia) they interact in the following way. The myogenic mechanism is stage 1 of autoregulation, it provides the development of compensatory vascular events already in the dynamic phase of the SAP change. The events occur prior to the local CBF changes, and seem to compensate for changes in homeostatic sphere. The myogenic component of autoregulation has to act as the protective mechanism, protecting the vascular bed from damage by intravascular pressure. This is the reason why it is found only in the dynamic phase of SAP changes, since this stage is the most potentially damaging for the vessels. However, such a "protective" myogenic reaction, at the same time also affects the value of local CBF preventing, to some extent, its deviation from the original level. If this preventation is sufficiently efficient from maintaining the environmental homeostasis then the task of autoregulation will be fulfilled by acting just its first component (Figure 7). One must also consider that, the myogenic reaction while serving its protective function quite effectively can do so without providing stability for the environmental homeostasis. Consequently, changes in SAP will lead to a respective deviation of local CBF from the original level. The same will occur if for some reason the myogenic mechanism is not activated. In such a case, the neurogenic mechanism of autoregulation (which is the second component) comes into action, effecting the return of local CBF to the initial level. Thus, the process of autoregulation of local CBF is carried out by the first and second components (Figure 22) or by the second component only (Figure 8B). Failure to prevent deviations in local CBF from its original level by both the myogenic and neurogenic mechanisms call in the metabolic mechanism (the third component). The metabolic mechanism comes into play when components 1 and 2 are negligible, or when the second component "comes out of play", or its action appears to be insufficiently effective, or the joint action of the first and second components fails to provide sufficient compensation for the disturbance.
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Thus, in studies of animals under normal conditions (i.e. no anesthesia) one may observe an autoregulatory reaction which is a composite manifestation of the three components of the autoregulatory process. However, the (metabolic) component manifests itself rarely under these conditions - having a frequency of up to 8.5%. Under normal conditions, the task of maintaining a stable local CBF in response to the demands of brain tissue during variations of SAP (autoregulation of local CBF) is taken care of sufficiently by two specific mechanisms. The mechanisms are: 1) myogenic and 2) neurogenic. It appears that the metabolic mechanism acts as a safeguard to the other two. Our data indicate that the myogenic component is effective in autoregulation in 35% of cases, while support from the neurogenic component increases this value of up to 90.6%, with additional help from the metabolic component it improves insignificantly this already high index. Describing the structure of autoregulatory process, commitment to its three intersupplementing links, is corroborated by investigations of several other authors. They have singled out (generally as a basic one) myogenic (Rapela, Green, 1964; Boysen et al., 1971; Symon et al., 1972; 1973), neurogenic (Ekstrom-Jodal et al 1970; Tada, 1978) and metabolic (Hirsch, Korner, 1964) components of autoregulation. There are some works in which the combination of the three components are observed (Yoshida et al., 1966; Kogure et al., 1970; Kawamura et al., 1974; Balueva et al.,1980; Moskalenko, 1980; Teplov, 1980), as well as observations which exclude the neurogenic component following the application of nerve blocators (Kawamura et al., 1974; Balueva et al., 1980; Teplow, 1980).
Figure 22. Manifestation of the first and second components of lCBF autoregulation during SAP elevation.
The above principle which describes the organisation of autoregulatory process seems to be well justified. It provides sufficient compensation for the SAP changes during conditions when the normal function of one or even possibly two components of autoregulation is disrupted. Thus, in our experiments withdrawn of the neurogenic mechanism, what we have attempted to do in a set of experiments with Nembutal anesthesia, did not lead to considerable impairment of autoregulatory capacity of the brain vascular bed.
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It is well known that anesthesia impedes the process of synaptic transmission. It strongly reduces and in some cases disrupts completely the transmission of excitation to synapses, which leads to a break in the connection between the afferent and efferent pathways of nervous reflexes or, at least, to a sharp reduction in these connections (Schmidt, Creutzfeldt, 1968; Creutzfeldt, 1975; Mozgov, 1979). Therefore, use of anesthesia results in suppression of the neurogenic mechanism of local CBF regulation (Moskalenko, 1974; Moskalenko et al., 1975) and it disrupts the normal course of regulatory reactions in the system of brain circulation (Betz, 1972; Moskalenko, 1974). Although, the overwhelming majority of studies devoted to the study of autoregulation of CBF were made and continue to be made on the anesthetized animals (Rapela, Green, 1964; Harper, 1966; Kogure et al., 1970; Symon et al.,1972, 1973; Tada, 1978), this did not stop the authors from coming to conclusions about the leading role of certaine mechanism in the process of autoregulation: of myogenic (Symon et al., 1972, 1973; Tada, 1978), and of metabolic (Hirsch, Korner, 1964; Zwetnow, 1968; Fujishima, 1971). However, with the autoregulatory structure described above, application of anesthesia results in the attenuation or "withdrawal" of the neural component. This must, certainly, modulate the temporal characteristics of the process of local CBF autoregulation. Thus under these conditions, only the action of myogenic and metabolic mechanisms are implemented. But the inference concerning the metabolic (Hirsch, Korner, 1964) or myogeno-metabolic (Yoshida et al., 1966; Mellander, 1977) nature of the autoregulatory process and complete refutation of participation in it of the neural mechanism (Kawamura et al., 1974; Sakuma, 1977; Tada, 1978) derived from such experiments can scarcely be considered as correct they seem to be applicable in the autoregulatory process, only during the conditions of anesthesia. Let us compare and contrast the results of our experiments on unanesthetized animals to the above mentioned results. As seen from Tables 7, application of anesthesia, as well as adreno- and cholinolytics (Table 7) has virtually no effect on the frequency of manifestation of a myogenic component of autoregulation. This was to be expected in the light of available evidence on the intimate nature of this component and principles of its functioning (Folkow, 1964; Shenderov, 1979; Begiashvili, 1981; Mitagvaria et al., 1981; Mitagvaria, 1983). The neural (second) component tangibly decreases (from 55.6 to 4.6%) which testifies to an almost complete withdrawal of the latter from autoregulation. In rare cases when the neural component does manifest itself, its temporal characteristics appear to be strongly retarded as compared to those under normal conditions (no anesthesia), reflecting a substantial impairment of functioning of the respective neural pathways. This picture is consistent with the statements mentioned above. Thus, a joint action under anesthesia between the myogenic and neurogenic components provides for the effective autoregulation in 44.8% of cases. No overall impairment of local CBF autoregulation occurs (by the finite result), since the efficiency of the metabolic (third) component adequately compensates for the "withdrawal" of the neurogenic one, thereby providing for the necessary autoregulation of local CBF. This data appears to be consistent with the principle subserving the organization of autoregulatory process, which has been formulated above. The interaction and intersubstitution of neurogenic and metabolic components are observed in experiments in which monitoring of
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local CBF changes in response to SAP oscillation is performed from one and the same position of the measuring electrode (prior to and after application of anesthesia). It should be mentioned that if we, while studying the principles of local CBF autoregulation process, had restricted ourselves only to the non-anesthetized animal experiments then we naturally would have come to the conclusion on the myogenoneurogenic nature of this process, or rather, would have ruled out the possibility of the metabolic mechanism. Restricting our experiments to anesthetized animals, on the contrary, would have led us to the erroneous conclusion that the nature of autoregulation is myogenicmetabolic and we would have rejected any role of a neurogenic mechanism. These claims continue to be made. In summation it is realistic to conclude that the process of local CBF autoregulation is determined by the joint action of myogenic, neurogenic and metabolic mechanisms of vascular activity and is built on the basis of their successive incorporation in this process. In addition, each subsequent (from the point of view of rapid action) mechanism is implicated in the regulation only in the case when the mechanism (or mechanisms) fails to compensate for the damaging effect. Such organization in the autoregulatory process makes the system of local CBF autoregulation highly flexible. If one takes into account that the intimate mechanisms of each of the three components are vastly different and that it is rather difficult to imagine these conditions except for episodes of acute injury to the brain (Lassen, Skinhoj, 1975), which lead to the immediate withdrawal of three if not two of the components. While exclusion of one of the components leads to enhanced activity of the other, the autoregulatory capacity of vascular bed as a whole is not disrupted. Thus, apart from the examples considered above, it may be said with definite certainty that withdrawal of the myogenic mechanism of autoregulation will be compensated for by enhancement of activity of the neural and metabolic mechanisms. Hence, depending on the conditions the autoregulation process of local CBF may incorporate myogenic, myogenic-neural, myogenic-metabolic, neurogenic, neurogenicmetabolic or metabolic characteristics that would be shown to exist by observation of the autoregulatory reactions in the various structures. This would occur in harmony with the general three component principle of organization of the autoregulatory process. Let us look into some peculiarities in the course of autoregulation which were seen during our experiments. From the figures presented above, the local CBF autoregulation process is not always completed by a full compensation for disturbing effect and by accurate return of local CBF to the original level. In many instances this return was incomplete, but in overwhelming majority of cases there was no reason to suggest that the partial return of the local CBF to the initial level was due to impotency of the regulatory mechanisms itself or to disruption in their functions. Firstly, this idea is not confirmed by testing influences (8% CO2). Secondly, manifestation of "incomplete" autoregulation on one of the channels of recording may be accompanied by "ideal" autoregulation of the others. Thirdly, this "incomplete" autoregulation is mediated in most of the cases by means of one or two components of autoregulation. This "incompleteness" entails incorporation in the autoregulatory process of the third component. At first glance, this idea might not appear to be consistent with the autoregulatory principles we have described above, but one can resolve the apparent dilema if one recalls that the biochemical homeostasis of the organism implies
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maintenance of a number of definite environmental parameters. In speaking of the autoregulation of CBF one implies not maintenance of CBF or local CBF on a strictly steady level, but merely retention of their relative stability during SAP changes (Lassen, 1959; Lassen, Christensen, 1976), they are maintained within a range. Thus, it becomes obvious that the tasks of mechanisms subserving local CBF autoregulation are not absolute compensation for disturbing effects and precise liquidation of local CBF deviations from the original level, but their jobs are retention within a particular range that corresponds to metabolic demands of brain tissue. Therefore, the inevitability of the incorporation and degree of action of the neurogenic and metabolic components of autoregulation will be defined not by the absolute amplitude of local CBF deviations, but by the extent to which its value goes beyond the ranges which are required for maintaining homeostasis of the environment. The myogenic component mediates regulation by an input influence. It is not the maintenance of homeostasis of the environment, but decreasing the damaging action on the vessels of SAP. Each of the subsequent (by rapid action) components of autoregulation comes into play only in the case when local CBF cannot be retained or returned to the boundary of "homeostatic value ranges" by the means of the preceding components. Consequently, nonincorporation of any component of autoregulation (if experimental conditions provide for its normal functioning) despite the available deviation of local CBF from the original level, addressees only the issue that the new level of local CBF appears to be within the given range. Apparently the closer the original level of local CBF gets to the edge of the range beyond which CBF is "driven" by SAP oscillation, the more accurate is autoregulatory return back to the original level. Bearing in mind that the width of homeostatic range may vary considerably depending on the level of metabolism in the given tissue region it may be assumed that even in the case when local CBF passively follows SAP changes which we thought were due to lack of autoregulation, in spite of a normal development of reactions to preceding testing influence, actually reflect only the fact that the observable deviation of local CBF takes place within the homeostatic ranges.
SECTION 2: REGULATION OF LOCAL CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW DURING OXYGEN INSUFFICIENCY
Chapter V
SOME THEORETICAL PREREQUISITES 5.1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Arterial hypoxia belongs to the class of one of the most essential external disturbing influences on the system responsible for the regulation of the cerebral blood circulation. Depending on its severity, there may arise changes in metabolism, blood circulation and disturbances in brain functions. It is known, for example, that moderate hypoxia in man, when oxygen tension in arterial blood (aPO2) falls to 50-40 mm Hg, results in disturbances in short-term memory and recognition, whereas at aPO2 below 40 mm Hg there occurs drastic impairment of all brain functions and at aPO2 equal to 30 mm Hg, as a rule, loss of consciousness occurs (Siesjo et al., 1974). In animals with aPO2 equal to 20 mm Hg consciousness is usually maintained but there appears changes in the electroencephalogram (EEG), in particular, slow waves develop (Siesjo et al., 1975). Measurements made both in man and animals (Kety, Shmidt, 1948; Cohen, 1967) have demonstrated that at the levels of oxygen tension in arterial blood, when the brain functions are being disturbed, one can usually observe a reduction in oxygen consumption by nerve tissue, although the concentration of ATP, ADP and AMP in the tissue remain constant (Schamhl et al., 1966; Siesjo, Nilsson, 1971; Duffy et al., 1972; MacMillan, Siesjo, 1972). Disturbances in brain functions are supposed to occur long before the visualized signs of reduction of the energetic processes (Siesjo et al., 1975) At various stages in EEG studies, investigators focused much attention on trying to determine of correlation between the level of oxygen content in inhaled gas mixture and the EEG. Under conditions of hypoxia the EEG was shown to be characterized by a permanent decrease of frequency (Lennox, Gibbs, 1932; Gibbs et al., 1935; Berger, 1938, Ozaki et al., 1995; Papadelis, 2003; LaManna et al., 2004). Thus, when the oxygen saturation in the arterial blood is 75-90% 8-14 Hz waves with 50 mcv amplitude is observable, while at 6575% saturation the frequency falls to 2-7 Hz (at the amplitude of 40-120 mcv). At the same time it has been suggested that at the level of oxygen consumption 8-9 ml/100g/min the EEG shows predominance of frequencies between 6 and 12 Hz, while at 5 ml/100g/min frequencies of 0.5-4 Hz predominate.
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It should be noted that measurements of PO2 on the surface of the cerebral cortex or in brain tissue itself manifest, under normal conditions, a rather wide range of levels: from 6 to 60 mm Hg and more (Grote, 1967; Lubbers, 1968; Grunewald, 1969). According to the data of Grunewald (1969) the level of tissue PO2 may reach 1-2 mm Hg without any signs of hypoxia. Lubbers went still farther in his calculations, having determined that for the isolated mitochondria the critical level of PO2 is below 0.05 mm Hg, he has come to the conclusion that at tissue PO2 between 0 and 1 mm Hg anoxic conditions do not necessarily emerge (Lubbers, 1974). It is apparent that the value of PO2 obtained in this particular measurement (other conditions being equal) depends solely on the type of the electrode used and the diameter of its tip. Utilization of submacroelectrode levels make a significant difference because of the varying distances from the blood vessel (Grechin, Borovikov, 1982). After several hundred of randomized measurements of local tissue PO2 in the brain utilizing the platinum electrodes histograms were obtained which showed the distribution of oxygen tension levels among brain tissues (Figure 23, Lubbers, 1974). There is a distinctly large variability of "coexisting" values of tissue PO2. What is then created is the possibility of obtaining different levels of PO2 while measuring it in various brain structures while using various constructions of measuring electrodes (Lukianova, 1964; Demchenko, Chuikin, 1975; Kovalenko et al., 1975; Leniger-Follert et al., 1975; Smith et al., 1975; Crockard et al., 1976; Ivanov, Kislyakov, 1979).
Figure 23. Distribution of the oxygen tension levels in brain tissue (Lubbers, 1974).
As it becomes apparent, it is almost impossible to draw any conclusions about sufficiency or insufficiency deficiency of oxygen supply to the brain tissue utilizing PO2 as its measurement. Past experiments in which Davies and Bronk used covered electrodes, significantly low levels of PO2 were obtained (from 4 to 10 mm Hg) in the cerebral cortex of experimental animals and from this perspective views about functioning of the cerebral cortex under conditions of physiological hypoxia were expounded (Davies, Bronk, 1942; 1957; Davies, 1962).
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Analysis of a large body of data in the literature (Marshak et al., 1948; Abramson et al., 1953; Sanotskaja, 1961; Kovalenko, 1962; Smith, Vane, 1966; Gurevich, Bernstein, 1967; 1978; Smirnov, Saveliev, 1968) indicates that during hypoxia the direction of the blood flow changes and varies in different tissues. In adjacent microregions of brain tissue, diverse changes in the microcirculation are described under conditions of moderate and acute hypoxia (Leniger-Follert et al., 1976; Mitagvaria et al., 1976; 1978; Kozniewska et al., 1987). This inherent local redistribution of blood flow during tissue hypoxia is due to different levels of metabolism in the explored microregions. In sites of low metabolic activity, blood flow may even decrease providing it increases in the sites where there is a high level of metabolic demand. These observations have been confirmed at a microcirculatory level when measurements of blood flow were made at the capillary level. Regarding regional blood flow, unequivocal results exist in regards to the direction of changes of cerebral blood flow. Under normal conditions, oxygen tension in the venous blood (in the segmental sinus) amounts to 32 mm Hg. When it decreases to 28 mm Hg, blood flow starts increasing (Lubbers, 1974). According to Opitz and Shneider (1980) at PO2 equal to 18-20 mm Hg hypoxia develops in the brain tissue. Consequently, these levels may be considered as critical for the brain as a whole. Under conditions of acidosis this critical level increases to 32 mm Hg (Grote et al., 1973). It has been firmly established that when aPO2 decreases below 50 mm Hg, local CBF starts increasing (Kogure et al., 1969; 1970; MacDowall, 1969) and at aPO2 equal to 20-25 mm Hg it increases 4-5 times (Johansson, Siesjo, 1974; MacMillan et al., 1974). However, data concerning the threshold level of oxygen in the inhaled air for the initiation of CBF alteration are not uniform. In 1943 Noell and Shneider demonstrated that when the oxygen content falls in the inhaled air below 11% there is a reduction of resistance of cerebral vessels and increase in local CBF. It was found that with free moving cats, blood flow in the thalamic and hypothalamic areas started to increase already when the oxygen content in the inhaled air became 18% (Betz, 1972). Since we utilized anesthetized animals, the discrepancy in data may be accounted for by a decrease of oxygen consumption in the brain of anesthetized animals as compared to the waking ones (Sokoloff, 1959; MacDowall, 1969). Be it as it may, a large group of investigators (Courtice, 1941; Opitz, Shneider, 1950; Schmidt, 1950; Lassen, 1959; Kety, 1961; Cohen, 1965; 1967) do consider that a system sensitive to oxygen tension somehow sends messages to the cerebral vessels concerning the demand of brain cells for oxygen, resulting in an increase in CBF. In the opinion of Siesjo et al. (1975) this increase is a unique mechanism for the maintenance of energy homeostasis in the hypoxic brain. At the present time, it is however still unknown which mechanism actually underlies the local CBF elevation in hypoxia. In recent literature this increase was considered to reflect the action of a Nitric Oxide (Faraci et al., 1994; Van Mill et al., 2002; Johannes et al., 2003; Joseph et al., 2004) as well as common modulator (extracellular pH) which determined also the CBF decrease in hypocapnia. At present it is known that maximal vasodilatation may also be achieved without any considerable shifts in pH or in concentration of other possible "factors of coupling" such as K+ or adenosine. Thus, in the studies of Dora et al., (1980) it was demonstrated that during moderate hypoxia (15 min inhalation of 12-15% O2), in spite of the absence of changes in K+ (as well as in the electrical activity of the brain) the tissue PO2 decrease was parallelled by dilatation of the cerebral vessels. No correlation was found
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between either the dynamics of local CBF and the alteration of K+ concentration at fall of the arterial PO2. Elevation in local CBF and a drop in the tissue PO2 appeared to precede the tissue changes in pH (Shinozuka, Nemoto, 1981). No significant findings were obtained when an attempt was made to link CBF increase with the reactions of carotid and aortal chemoreceptors during hypoxia (Traystman, Fitzgerald, 1981). A study was made in which the power of smooth muscle contraction was to be dependent directly upon the level of PO2. Detar and Bohr (1968) assumed that oxygen played an important role in the metabolic process of the smooth muscle mitochondria cell, since it is the final acceptor of electrons in the oxidation chain. In their opinion, this mechanism of metabolic rate restriction, being rapidly reversible at the levels of PO2 from 5 to 100 mm Hg, may serve as a regulator of high-energy "half-finished" products required for the contraction of smooth muscles and may thus be the mechanism responsible for the regulation of local CBF. It is known that a reduction of extracellular PO2 below 50 mm Hg results in a gradual suppression of the electromechanical activity of the vascular wall. Utilizing the portal vein of a rat when a PO2 lower than 7 mm Hg occurred a total suppression of this activity occurred (Hellstrand et al., 1977). Hypoxia appears to attenuate the spontaneous electrical discharges. In their opinion, changes in PO2 within physiological ranges may affect the myogenic activity of the vascular smooth muscles by acting at the membrane level. Such a mechanism might participate in the regulation of blood flow. In studies of Carrier et al. (1964) similar ideas are found in which regulation of myogenic tone of resistance and precapillary vessels are accounted for by changes in local PO2. In contrast, in the investigations of Pittman and Dulling (1978) it was concluded that at the level of small precapillary vessels any influence of PO2 on contractability of smooth muscle fibers appear hardly probable. In the study of Van Mill et al., (2002) the role of Nitric Oxide NO in hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilatation in young healthy volunteers has been investigated. The effect of the NO synthase inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) on the cerebral blood flow (CBF) was assessed during normoxia and during hypoxia. Subjects were positioned in a magnetic resonance scanner, breathing normal air (normoxia) or a N2-O2 mixture (hypoxia). The CBF was measured before and after administration of L-NMMA (3 mg/kg) by use of phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging techniques. Administration of L-NMMA during normoxia did not affect CBF. Hypoxia increased CBF from 1,049 ± 113 to 1,209 ± 143 ml/min (P < 0.05). After L-NMMA administration, the augmented CBF returned to baseline (1,050 ± 161 ml/min; P < 0.05). Similarly, cerebral vascular resistance declined during hypoxia and returned to baseline after administration of L-NMMA (P < 0.05 for both). Use of phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging has shown that hypoxia-induced cerebral vasodilatation in humans is mediated by NO. To emphasize the discrepancy which exists from studies of hypoxia, we will present two investigations. In 1968 Freemen demonstrated that not only in the process of hypoxia, but also following it, autoregulation of cerebral blood flow remains disturbed, even after the posthypoxic cerebral hyperemia is eliminated. Two years later Kogure et al. (1970) worked with dogs with an inhalation of 6% O2 in the mixture with nitrogen described maintenance of autoregulation during 4-6 min since arterial PO2 got below 25 mm Hg. In the author’s
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opinion, autoregulation persists even in cases where hypoxia causes an increase in CBF. These conclusions are in direct opposition to the findings of other authors. Hence, one may consider as a firmly established fact that hypoxia: 1) disturbs the brain function, 2) causes an increase in CBF. We observe the two aforementioned facts, but yet remain unaware of the intimate mechanism underlying the CBF increase. Considering the opposing views in relation to the persistence of CBF autoregulation under conditions of hypoxia, one must look deeper. As has been already pointed out, the CBF increase is, as a matter of fact, considered to be a unique mechanism which provides energy homeostasis in the hypoxic brain. However Bicher and his associates (Bicher, 1973; 1974; Bicher et al., 1973; 1974; 1975) developed an idea which somehow poses another question - the functioning of compensatory mechanisms in the brain during hypoxia. While recording PO2 in separate microregions of nerve tissue by means of microelectrodes the mentioned authors found that in the specific regions the level of PO2 is characterized by a striking constancy and can only be altered by vigorous changes in CBF or by change in content of the inhalable air. During short-term anoxia, tissue PO2 is first attenuated, and then it remains at a relatively constant level. Upon increase in the arterial PO2, tissue PO2 also increases, exceeding the initial level and then returning to the level slowly. Simultaneous measurement (by means of one and same electrode) of PO2 and the electrical activity in the nervous tissue has shown that at the decreased PO2 level there is a considerable attenuation of the electrical activity too. Under conditions of hypoxia the CBF increase sets in only when tissue PO2 starts to fall. During inhalation of pure nitrogen, a decrease in the level of tissue PO2 in some cases appears to be 60 seconds later than that of arterial PO2. Assuming that time constants of arterial and tissue electrodes are similar, the author attributes this time delay to the work of a special mechanism, distinct from the mechanism responsible for the CBF increase. By analyzing his collected data, Bicher draws the following observations based on the sequence of cause-consequence events: a decrease of arterial PO2 starts to show up when the level of tissue PO2 is lapsed due to a transport delay (no less than 30 seconds). From this point on, tissue PO2 falls and then the CBF begins to elevate (this is when the second protecting mechanism comes into action). In the case where hypoxia continues and the CBF increase fails to compensate for it (arterial PO2 tends to zero), a rapid disruption of the brain electrical activity occurs (this moment sets in when the tissue PO2 falls approximately by 20%). On this basis the following conclusions can be drawn: 1. Neurons are very sensitive to their oxygen environment. 2. There exists a reflex suppression in the neuron activity, i.e. there are appropriate oxygen receptors in the brain tissue. 3. Electrical silence appears to be a compensatory mechanism. Opitz and Shneider (1950) have made a supposition that there exists oxygen receptor on the venous end of capillaries. If this is actually the case, then they may have the properties to both increase CBF and decrease it in a reflex way by the synaptic or neuronal potentials. As a matter of fact while under conditions of hypoxia the homeostatic mechanisms establish a novel regimen of operation for the brain to require a minimal expenditure of energy resources. There is no doubt that this theory is not devoid of charm and considers "electrical silence" under conditions of hypoxia from quite an unexpected point of view.
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In contrast to the works considered above, which have been devoted largely to the establishment of quantitative correlation of the level of arterial or tissue PO2 and CBF (or EEG) under conditions of hypoxia, present studies have chosen a unique approach. An attempt has been made, with the help of dynamic characteristics, to analyse the possible reasons that underlie heterogenic reactions of local blood flow in adjacent microareas of brain tissue in response to the influence of systemic type and mechanisms of the development of posthypoxic hyperemia.
5.2. THE HOMEOSTATIC RANGE OF CBF AND ITS ROLE IN HETEROGENITY OF CBF RESPONSES DURING HYPOXIA In the previous section we have introduced the concept of the "Homeostatic Range" of CBF, i.e. the range in which the limits of local CBF meets a metabolic demand of brain tissue. It is evident that both the mean level and width of this range depends upon tissue metabolic demand and gas content in the delivered blood. In particular, an essential role must be played by the level of arterial oxygen tension (aPO2). It is therefore reasonable to suggest that during decrease of the latter (or enhancement of tissue metabolic demand) the homeostatic range should shift upward, and that the velocity of the shift and its amplitude would be determined, under conditions of hypoxia, or anoxia, by the intensity of their development. During transition to respiration with normal (or enriched with oxygen) air homeostatic range of local CBF again shifts downwards and is dependent on the new concrete conditions which coincide or does not coincide with the initial state. It is also evident that depending on the direction of previous regulating influence the initial level of local CBF at the given moment may be located both at the upper and lower limits of homeostatic range. Let us consider theoretical diagrams presented in Figures 24-25. Let us suppose that under conditions of developing hypoxia there is a stepwise (by convention) shift upwards in the homeostatic range (HR),while during the transition to normal respiration again it returns to the initial position. If this is the case then in two microregions of brain tissue the initial levels (1 and 2) of local CBF are at the onset of hypoxia at the opposite limits of the range. Therefore, their dynamics may vary in a sufficient degree, despite the fact that the influence (hypoxia) has a global character and embraces not only the brain but also the whole organism. In particular, local CBF, whose value under conditions of low metabolic demand is at the upper limit of the homeostatic range (level 1, Figure 24), will not react to hypoxia for a considerable length of time and will react only in its last stage when the lower limit of homeostatic range will have exceeded level 1, which is the regulating mechanism which increases local CBF in the given region. As soon as the signal of discrepancy between metabolic demand and the level of local CBF disappears, the regulatory mechanism ceases its operation and local CBF is stabilized on a novel level, which is at the lower limit of the shifted homeostatic range. As the indicated range returns to the initial position, the regulatory mechanism lowers the level of local CBF stabilization occurs at the upper limit, since the entry of local CBF into the homeostatic range must eliminate the signal of discomformity and the regulatory mechanism ceases its active functioning.
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Figure 24. Theoretical diagrams of lCBF dynamics with two different initial levels (1 and 2) during stepwise shift in the homeostatic range (HR) under condition of low metabolic demand. t - the latency of lCBF response (initial level - 2), Max - maximal level of lCBF.
Figure 25. Same as in Fig.24, but under condition of high metabolic demand.
The local CBF with initial level 2 will behave in a similar way. However, elevation of local CBF will start much earlier and the posthypoxic level will exceed the initial level, virtually by the height of homeostatic range itself. Thus, the first event is an increase of local CBF which starts with a long latency (t) and then (in posthypoxic period) returns to the initial level. In the other case, the process of regulation is characterized by a short latency and then there occurs the so-called posthypoxic hyperemia. We can also look at the dynamics of changes in local CBF in the course of hypoxia under conditions of a high metabolic demand (Figure 25). In all cases one must determine the location of the initial level of the local CBF homoeostatic range. In fact it is here that we formulate a hypothesis which is able to partially explain the mechanisms underlying the
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differences which are found in the local CBF patterns recorded in the adjacent regions of the brain under conditions of hypoxia, and the subsequent development of posthypoxic hyperemia. In the theoretical drawings 24-25 two conventional versions are presented: for the lower level of metabolic demand (MD) (Figure 24), and a high level (Figure 25). At a similar duration and intensity of hypoxia, the amplitude and curvature of displacement of the homeostatic range (HR) would, apparently, be determined by MD in the given site of brain tissue. In the case of the lower level of MD local CBF with the initial level 2 will elevate in the course of hypoxia with certain latency and will remain at the elevated level provided other conditions are unaltered. As compared to it, local CBF with initial level 1 will deviate with a much longer latency (t) and will practically return to its initial level. In the case of a high level of MD (Figure 25) while hypoxia is developing the compensatory displacement of HR, leads to a maximum rise of local CBF, fails to satisfy the existing MD, according to Bicher's theory described above (Bruley et al., 1971; Bicher, 1973; Bicher et al., 1973; 1974;1975), there may "occur" a sharp decrease of functional activity in the given tissue area usually leading to the reduction of MD and consequently to a reduction of average level of homeostatic range. Thus the amplitude of the displacement would depend on a set of variables (characteristics of new regimen of the work of neuro-glial populations, residual saturation of the arterial blood with oxygen, hematocrit, etc.). In the case of absence of such an active readjustment of functioning of hypoxic brain area, there would apparently develop pathology and an attenuation of the functional activity with all its resulting consequences. Thus, the existence of a homeostatic range of CBF, as we propose, and its consequent displacement under conditions of variable oxygen saturation of the arterial blood, offers some explanation of: a) The individual differences in time and amplitude of changes in CBF at various microsites of brain tissue in response to overall hypoxia; b) The mechanism which occurs in the development of posthypoxic hyperemia. Assuming the first has no explanation at this point, we turn to the second idea. Evaluation of the presence of the phenomenon of posthypoxic hyperemia in the brain was attempted to be explained by disturbances of metabolic control (Lassen, 1969) assuming that "following any kind of influences resulting in the development of tissue hypoxia - for example, inhalation of pure nitrogen, a sharp drop of systemic arterial pressure, substantial elevation of intracranial pressure, trauma or brain edema - there usually occur disturbances in the metabolic control, during which CBF starts to exceed local metabolic demand" (Lassen, 1969, p.148). This deduction was made from data obtained in patients with acute occlusion of the middle cerebral artery or who had tumors in the brain in which apart from the sites with reduced CBF, there were sites with excess perfusion. This phenomenon, named by the author "stealing phenomenon" or a "syndrome of Robin Hood" is detected under conditions of formed pathology and, it, in our opinion, principally varies from the phenomenon of posthypoxic hyperemia which can be evoked locally following a short-term inhalation of pure nitrogen (or an air with reduced oxygen content) or, for example, after short-lasting asphyxia. If according to Lassen, such hyperemia may be due to acidosis (local accumulation of lactic acid), then, in terms to our hypothesis, one ought to clearly delineate the mechanism of local CBF increase during hypoxia and the mechanism of CBF maintenance at a particular level in
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the post-hypoxic period. If the former is accomplished by the operation of some mechanism of CBF regulation (in this case it does not matter whether it is metabolic, neural or humoral) directed toward matching the level of local CBF to the homeostatic range, the latter must be due to the "switching off" of the regulatory mechanism due to the disappearance of the signal which exists to warn of the discrepancy between MD and the level of local CBF. In our experiments we studied the local CBF dynamics under conditions of hypoxic hypoxia (inhalation of air with a 10% content of oxygen), anoxia (inhalation of a 100% of nitrogen) and asphyxia (switching off the artificial respiration). Our acquired data partly confirms the hypothesis adopted by us, but the final verification is in need of quantitative measurements of local CBF and a set of other electric and nonelectric parameters of the state of explored areas of the brain - only in this way may one precisely establish the existence of a homeostatic range of local CBF and determine its limits. However, at this time we lack such data.
Chapter VI
DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF REGULATION OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW IN THE CEREBRAL CORTEX UNDER CONDITIONS OF HYPOXIA, ANOXIA AND ASPHYXIA An essential portion of the results expounded below were obtained by one of the authors at the Max Planck Institute of Physiological Systems (Dortmund, Germany). Experiments were carried out on adult cats weighing 2-2.5 kg under Nembutal anesthesia (25-30 mg/kg), immobilized by flaxedyl and maintained on artificial respiration. End-tidal CO2 was controlled continuously and was maintained (before the onset of influence) within normal limits. pH, hematocrit and RBC content in the arterial blood were measured at definite intervals of time. Polygraphic recording of local blood flow in the cerebral cortex was made by the method of electrochemical generation of hydrogen, described above (Stosseck et al., 1974). Systemic arterial pressure was measured through a catheter inserted in one of the femoral arteries. Below in Figures 26-31 are presented the most typical results of these studies. While making an analysis of records from the above-stated position one should by all means take into account changes in systemic arterial pressure (SAP) which, as a rule, occur in hypoxia, anoxia and asphyxia and which may, to a certain extent, determine the dynamics of local CBF. In this way of utmost interest are the curves of local CBF changes whose shape differs radically from the dynamics of SAP. Analysis of the dynamics of CBF under conditions of asphyxia Johnson et al. (1979) have found no correlation between the CBF increase and changes in arterial PO2, PCO2 and pH and therefore arrived at the conclusion that SAP is a critical factor determining the level of CBF. Dynamic characteristics obtained by us actually refute this conclusion and indicate a sufficient independence of the local CBF dynamics of SAP changes. Patterns of local CBF recorded concomitantly in adjacent microsites of the cerebral cortex may vary from each other to a considerable degree and, actual elevation of the local CBF may start with latency specific for each microsite of brain tissue. In the presence of clear-out posthypoxic (Figure 26, lCBF1), postasphyxic (Figure 27, lCBF1) or postanoxic (Figure 28, lCBF1) hyperemia
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being on one channel, the other channels as a rule record virtually complete recovery of the initial levels of local CBF. Differences in duration of post-hypoxic hyperemia in individual microsites of the cerebral cortex are clearly seen in Figure 26. Almost similar, though differing in latency changes in CBF may be observed both in anoxia (Figure 29) and asphyxia (Figure 30). Under conditions of prolonged (100 seconds or longer) asphyxia (Figure 31), despite a sufficient increase in SAP, in two microsites of the cortex in about a minute after the onset of asphyxia there is an abrupt reduction of local CBF (recording channels 2 and 4), while in the postasphyxic period local CBF gets stabilized in all microsites on the level below the initial.
Figure 26. lCBF dynamics developed in three adjacent microregions of the brain cortex under conditions of hypoxic hypoxia.
Figure 27. Local blood flow dynamics in 4 adjacent microregions of the brain cortex during asphyxia (ASPHX) and hyperoxygenation (100% O2).
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Figure 28. Same as in Figure 27, but during anoxia (N2-breathing).
Figure 29. Example of different latency of lCBF responses during anoxia in adjacent microregions of the brain tissue.
All these peculiarities of local CBF variations appear to be entirely within the framework of the hypothesis described above. In particular, behavior of lCBF1 in Figures 27 and 28, corresponds, perhaps, to the variant presented in Figure 24, behaviour of lCBF2 and lCBF4 in Figure 31 (their attenuation during asphyxia and lower postasphyxic level compared to the initial) corresponds to the variant given in Figure 25 which suggests a drastic fall of metabolic demand and respective displacement of homeostatic range of local CBF downwards. All other patterns of local CBF are more or less satisfactorily described in the variant given in Figure 24. Thus, proceeding from the figures herewith presented, a conclusion can be drawn which states that in the majority of explored microsites of the cerebral cortex the medium level of MD is in evidence and only in some cases are its lower or higher levels observed. Of course
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we believe that such a gradation of MD levels is by convention, and that it corresponds entirely to a normal law of distribution and is verified by our hypothesis.
Figure 30. Same as in Figure 29, but during asphyxia with nonsignificant elevation in SAP.
Figure 31. Same as in Figure 30, but with significant elevation in SAP.
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Unfortunately, the data described does not allow one to estimate the intimate nature of the mechanism of local CBF increase, but it does allow one to comprehend the basic principles of adaptation to an impending oxygen deficit and describes accurately the ways in which the system of blood supply regulation maintains its stable functioning of the brain elements and virtually in all cases (except the one presented in Figure 31) demonstrate the existence of a well pronounced autoregulation of CBF at the initial stages of development of oxygen deficiency.
SECTION 3: REGULATION OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW IN THE BRAIN DURING CHANGES IN ITS FUNCTIONAL-METABOLIC ACTIVITY
Chapter VII
GENERAL PROBLEMS OF THE BRAIN FUNCTIONAL ACTIVITY AND LOCAL BLOOD FLOW COUPLING 7.1. BLOOD SUPPLY TO THE CORTEX OF "NONWORKING" BRAIN In the later part of the twentieth century intensive studies attempting correlate the functional activity of individual cortical regions and hyperemia in these regions were undertaken. Meynert was the first to claim the existence of this interrelationship. It is interesting to note that this idea is still of interest today. Even when the body is at rest there takes place a periodic alteration of the functional activities in the various structures of the brain, which, in its turn, requires an adequate blood supply. The majority of the data at the mentioned period has been obtained under clinical conditions (Ingvar, Gustafson, 1970; Sveinsdottir et al., 1970; Risberg, Ingvar, 1973; Ingvar, Schwartz, 1974). It appears that in the quiet waking subjects, in a recumbent position with closed eyes (i.e. complete rest) the level of blood flow is increased in the premotor and frontal areas of the cerebral cortex (on an average, by 30% more than the mean level of blood flow in the hemispheres). A relatively high level is observed also in the posterior Sylvian area. The temporal lobe and parietal area of the cortex including a large part of Sulcus Rolandi, are characterized by a low level of blood flow. Similar distribution of blood flow was seen by Wilkinson et al.(1969). As defined by Ingvar, this "hyperfrontal pattern" is sufficiently stable and does not undergo change for years even in elderly people (in the absence of any psychic disorders and signs of the brain damage (Ingvar, 1975). In the state of spontaneous sleep (Ingvar, 1975) or under anesthesia (Herschat, Schmidt, 1973) this pattern of local blood flow disappears. In patients suffering from traumatic or vascular affections, considerable deviations from this pattern are observed (Obrist et al., 1979). These deviations are also observable in various psychopathologic states (such as focal epilepsy, dementia, and chronic schizophrenia).
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D.Ingvar considers these disorders to reflect the metabolic shifts. With the use of computer tomography he has succeeded in demonstrating that in the focus of epilepsy, hyperemia was accompanied by an increase in glucose uptake. In the state of depression the level of blood flow decreases. A relationship between the depth of the depression state and the level of the cerebral blood flow decrease is correlative (Mathew et al., 1980). In patients suffering from chronic schizophrenia, a fall in the blood flow level to the frontal area is correlated with a decrease in glucose uptake in the same area (Ingvar, 1981).
7.2. THE LOCAL BLOOD FLOW COUPLING WITH THE CORTICAL ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY It is well known that the cortical electrical activity is dependent upon the intensity of afferent impulse volleys. Thus, the neurons from isolated strips of the cortex are characterized either by lack of the electrical activity, or manifest unusual spontaneous activity that is correlated with the metabolic demand and local blood flow (Creutzfeldt, Houchin, 1974). Suppression of normal neuronal metabolism occurs during anoxia or acute hypoxia. These states lead to a potent suppression of the neuronal activity in the cortex, which is in the first stage a result of attenuation of excitatory influences of subcortical afferents on the cortical neurons. It is well known, that nerve cell density per unit of volume of the cerebral cortex considerably varies within various areas. According to Shell (1953), the number of nerve cells may be 2.106 per 1 cm2 in the human cerebral cortex and 6-15.106 per 1 cm2 in the feline cortex. Taking into account: 1) density of neuronal distribution in an area, 2) mass of a single nerve cell is 50.000 picogram, Hyden (1960) assume that each nerve cell generates 10 spikes per second have obtained the following values of energy consumption: 1.4.10-4 cal/cm2 (given the thickness of the human cerebral cortex is 2 mm) or 7.10-5 cal/g/sec. In the cat this parameter appears to be within the range of 2-5.10-4 cal/g/sec during the spike activity. Comparing these data with the results of calculations made by Kety and Schmidt (1948) on the oxygen consumption, Creutzfeldt (1975) has come to the conclusion that only about 0.33% or even less energy consumed by cortex can be attributed to the nerve cell spike activity. Independent of external stimulation, the desynchronization of electrical activity which developed in the cerebral cortex is, in the opinion of Demchenko (1983), the most reliable sign of local blood flow increase. It is well known from the data available in the literature that during the convulsive activity at the onset of an epileptic seizure blood flow to the brain increases 2-3 fold (Brodersen et al., 1973; Howse et al., 1974, Chassagnon et al., 2007, Jacobs et al., 2008 ), yet such a state of the brain is the least close to its normal activity. But during experiments this may be the case since at this time there is a maximal activity of the cortical neurons and perhaps one can more distinctly trace the interrelation between the functional and hemodynamic shifts occurring in the brain. Local changes in the activity of the individual structures may actually be induced by the electrical stimulation of other brain structures having afferent connections with the area being studied. With this in mind, Baldy-Moulinier (1975) chose to work with the septum while
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stimulating the reticular formation followed by the hippocampus. Septal blood flow was measured by the Xenon technique. Concomitantly with the appearance of the hippocampal theta rhythm during the stimulation of the mesencephalic reticular formation the septal blood flow started to increase. In the same experiments when the contralateral hippocampus was electrically stimulated blood flow within the septum increased by 100% of the control. The EEG pattern, characterized by the appearance of slow waves within the theta-delta range, that is usually observable in the conditions of pathology and functional disorders, is also of great interest. In the experiments of Demchenko (1983), such a state is attended by a tangible decrease of local blood flow. A sharp decrease in blood flow and oxygen consumption in the cortex was observed in clinics whose patients suffered from chronic destructive affections of the brainstem (Ingvar, 1975; Gustafsson et al., 1982). Baldy-Mouliner and Ingvar (1968) evaluated the correlation between blood flow and EEG during photic stimulation. They found an intimate interrelation between these processes, finding no dependence between the firing rate and blood flow (perhaps because of the measurements being made not in the very visual area of the cortex but in the adjacent region); on the other hand, a good correlation between local blood flow, electrical activity and the firing rate was found while studying the lateral geniculate nuclei. Increases in cortical blood flow was correlated with frequency of firing between 10 and 50 per second (BaldyMoulinier, 1975). Compiling of data which has been reported in the literature allows certain inferences to be made. That is that desynchronization of the cortical electrical activity is usually attended by an increase in the local CBF, whereas the onset of the slow wave activity is followed by its abrupt decrease. There is no doubt that the process of energy loss and recovery must serve as the associating link between the two events, although they are fairly diverse by their nature and character. Bearing in mind that nervous tissue does not have its own stores of energy and that the latter must be steadily delivered by means of an adequate blood supply, the close correlation described above between the most specific patterns of electrical activity in the cortex and the dynamics of blood flow becomes understandable. As has been already indicated above, there is no quantitative dependence between the degree of alteration of the functional state of the brain and the change of its electrical parameters. Patterns of electrical parameters characteristic of a variety of functional states have not been identified, while the "map" of blood flow distribution, as seen above, has provided a vivid picture of transition from one state to the other. Further extension of studies on the dynamics of redistribution of blood flow in the brain during the most different functional loads will, apparently, permit one to evaluate the structural organization of the brains working much more efficiently than by only utilizing electrical parameters.
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7.3. BLOOD FLOW IN THE CORTEX DURING SENSORY STIMULATION Mean cerebral blood flow and metabolism under normal conditions can be altered but insignificantly so (for instance, during voluntary activity, solution of a task, speech, reading, etc.) reaches a high level of nociceptive stimulation. In this state of discomfort, a painful sensation is rendered, by the pattern of lCBF, which appears to differ remarkably from all the others. In the experiments of Ingvar (1975) electrical stimulation of the thumb of the contralateral hand (with the intensity twice as much as threshold) resulted in a moderate increase of local flow in sulcus Rolandi, being more pronounced in the premotor zone (as compared to the postcentral one). If the increase in the stimulus elicited in the patient is a feeling of discomfort or light pain, then the blood flow change has a more significant character and embraces the entire sulcus Rolandi and frontal area, relatively low blood flow in the temporal and parietal areas remaining unaltered. Similar data have been obtained in the studies of Tsubokawa et al (1981). Activation of the cortical terminals of the sensory analyzers in order to reveal the correlation between the functional activity and blood circulation, a number of authors have obtained intriguing results. Friberg et al. (1985) studied regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in 10 patients suffering from various diseases that made intracranial surgical intervention inevitable. rCBF measurements were made during calorimetric vestibular stimulation with lukewarm water in 254 areas of the cerebral cortex. It was only in one site of the cortex located in the upper temporal area, that rCBF was found to be increased, verifying that there exists a considerable focal activation which occurs in the contralateral area of the stimulated side of the hemisphere. Kilibaeva (1985) stimulated the vibrissae in rabbits and obtained a clear-cut local focus of increased blood flow within the area studied (as compared to the resting state). Simultaneously with the blood flow increase, PO2 also increased which is a characteristic of the reaction of functional hyperemia. In the adjacent regions, the dynamics of blood flow and PO2 appeared unaltered. It should be noted that mean value of blood flow throughout the studied area did not change at the stimulation of the vibrissae. It is important to compare the dynamics of blood flow, PO2 and ECoG in the brain area under study during sensory stimulation. Maximum of ECoG power increase and the reaction of hyperemia were recorded 40-50 sec after the onset of sensory stimulation. Consequently, the stimulation applied to the vibrissae resulted in the blood flow increase in a rather localized region of the primary sensorimotor cortex in rabbits. No significant changes in blood supply of the adjacent regions occurred, although there was a tendency for the blood flow to change in them. In evaluation of the spacial distribution of hemodynamics in response to photic stimulation, Demchenko (1983) demonstrated that in the occipital cortex a mean increase in local blood flow occurred by 25%, in the frontal area by 9%, and in the parietal areas there were no significant changes, while in the temporal area a decrease was noted. In the same experiment audiostimulation (with the frequency of 100Hz, intensity 100 Db) in cats resulted in a rise of local blood flow in the temporal area. What is more, distinct from photic
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stimulation, the increase in blood flow was more localized, and in particular, was mainly found in the caudal part of the primary auditory field. The most important results were obtained in the 1960s. Using the method of differential thermometry, Marshak (1967) and Ryzhova (1968) showed local blood flow changes in the cerebral cortex of cats and rabbits in response to photic stimulation. In particular, in the examined animals in response to one and the same stimulation, for instance, photic, the blood flow change occurred in the visual and auditory areas of the cortex, but the reactions always had different directions, i.e. an increase in blood flow in the visual area was accompanied by its attenuation in the auditory (Ryzhova, 1967). A number of researchers (Antoshkina, Naumenko, 1960; Benua, Lesniak, 1967) found by means of electroplethysmography qualitative changes occurring in the blood volume of the visual area during illumination of the retina in cats.
7.4. BLOOD FLOW IN THE CORTEX DURING MOTOR ACTIVITY Gross et al. (1980) demonstrated that during treadmill exercises the total blood flow in the canine brain undergoes no change, whereas the mean in local blood flow is increased by 40% in the structure responsible for the sensorimotor control. After injecting doxaprene, a drug which elicits an elevation of the systemic arterial pressure while decreasing the PCO2 to the level similar to that observed during treadmill exercises, the basal CBF fell and spontaneous changes mentioned above were lacking. In spite of the presence of a vasoconstrictor factor of hypocapnia, during motor activity, blood flow rises in the sensorimotor area of the cortex, i.e. under certain conditions, enhancement of metabolism in this structure dominates over the vasoconstrictor factors during regulation of the vascular resistance. Olesen (1971) demonstrated that working the hand and shoulder leads to a rise of local blood flow in the contralateral area of sulcus Rolandi. A fairly faint increase was also obtained during homolateral work. These findings have been confirmed by Ingvar (1975) as well. Studying of the distribution of blood flow during rhythmic hand clenching Olesen found that the essential blood flow does change on the contralateral side. From the frontal area which was the area of "highest blood flow" it shifted to the sulcus Rolandi. Later Halsey (1979) and Lauritzen et al. (1981) obtained similar results, with increases reaching 50% and more as compared to the resting value. Simultaneously, a decrease in blood flow was seen in the frontal and temporal areas. Using the method of rheoencephalography Okhnianskaia and Leninetskaia (1976) while working with the contralateral hand obtained an opposite effect, they recorded blood flow increase by 60% in the temporal area. It is interesting to note that blood flow increase during contralateral manual work (in Ingvar's experiments) was less pronounced in preroland than postroland and adjacent parietal areas. This region has a posterior position in relation to that which is activated by the sensory stimulation area. From these findings, Ingvar made the following inference: Voluntary movements activate primarily
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the sensory areas, since quantitatively; activation appears to be more pronounced in relation to the precentral motor area. These findings were confirmed in animals too. A tight coupling between the level of metabolism and local CBF has been shown in a number of other works as well (Siesjo et al., 1980; Sokoloff, 1981; Katz-Brull et al., 2006). It appears that sensory stimulation, be it motor or mental activity, regularly increase the velocity of cerebral metabolism of oxygen and blood flow intensity while these parameters remain unaltered in the entire brain as a whole. Sokoloff (1981), states that the level of local blood flow is found to be distributed in the brain structures in exact proportion to its glucose utilization rate. This rate alters when the local glucose uptake changes due to changes in its functional activity. Therefore, it can be assumed that the level of functional activity in the structural elements and functional components of the central nervous system (CNS) regulates the local velocity of energetic metabolism while the local blood flow adjusts to the increased metabolic demands. During acute hypoxia the coupling between the level of metabolism and local blood flow may be disrupted.
7.5. BLOOD FLOW IN THE CORTEX DURING MENTAL ACTIVITY Matsuda et al. (1984) have studied rCBF in normal right-handers during movements of the left hand and while reading aloud. A focal increase in rCBF was found to occur in the prefrontal cortex, both of the secondary motor areas, the primary sensorimotor area of the hand and the central gray matter on the right side. While reading aloud the rCBF increase was noted in the primary visual cortex, the visual cortex of the striated body, the prefrontal cortex, both accessory motor areas, the left prefrontal area of the eye, as well as in the left angular sulcus. Kurachi et al. (1985) using the method of inhalation of 133Xe determined the rCBF in 16 patients with schizophrenia and in 20 healthy volunteers. Mean values of the hemispheric rCBF in schizophrenic patients were found to be lower than in healthy subjects. In schizophrenic patients suffering from auditory hallucination a marked increase in rCBF was seen in the left temporal area, while in patients without such signs, in the right one. While studying the neurologically normal patients Ingvar and Schwartz (1974) found that in a simple verbal testing (repetition of names, week days, etc.) the mean level of CBF remains unaltered. However, a shift does occur in high levels of rCBF to the posterior direction, involving the premotor area, sulcus Rolandi and Sylvian gyrus. In a small number of cases speech was also shown to elicit various CBF changes in the non-dominant hemisphere. In this hemisphere, blood flow tends to decrease, especially postcentrally, while at the same time, an insignificant increase of local blood flow was found in sulcus Rolandi of the non-dominant hemisphere. While measuring local blood flow in a variety of cortical areas in man during mental arithmetic, Oskalok (1979) found psychologic loading to cause statistically significant changes in the majority of sites in both hemispheres, though the pattern and degree of CBF changes varied during different kinds of counting. Almost under the same experimental conditions, utilizing the hydrogen clearance method, Shakhnovich, Razumovski (1974)
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obtained results which showed a local CBF increase by 33% over the initial level. In addition, a 47% decrease of local blood flow in the right parietal area occurred during mental arithmetic. As stated previously, attenuation of blood flow was rarely seen while utilizing the various methods. Besides, "lack of blood flow changes in one point might be coupled with its elevation or attenuation in the adjacent point". It has been demonstrated by Shakhnovich et al., (1979) that with most patients with cerebrovascular disorders during a variety of functional loadings the pattern of local blood flow changes and it is different in one and the same regions of the brain. In their opinion, this is due to different functional significance and differentiation of the studied structures. In auditory tests Knopman et al. (1982) made measurements of rCBF (133Xe) in 11 areas of either hemisphere in young healthy people. Perception appeared to result in a considerable blood flow increase in the left posterior Sylvian area and changes were in line with the character of the information heard. In a series of experiments with psychological testing (memorization of digital material, solution of tasks) the elevation of local blood flow was found in the premotor and frontal areas (Risberg, Ingvar, 1973). At the same time, relatively low blood flow was in evidence between the primary posterior zones of sulcus Rolandi where an increased level of blood flow is usually observed.
7.6. BLOOD FLOW IN THE CORTEX DURING EMOTIONAL REACTIONS Changes in local blood flow occur when there is an application of emotional stimuli. Observations were made on humans with implanted electrodes. When the patients perceived a nurse preparing a syringe with an injection, cerebral blood flow increased, while a state of anxiety appeared and a psychomotor syndrome developed. In evaluating a vast body of data obtained in patients Betz (1975) came to a conclusion that the local CBF responses to the development of emotional tension vary in terms of the stimulus duration, and are as a rule more pronounced at the application of the first stimulus than the subsequent ones. The qualitative picture of the local CBF is determined both by the degree of body movement and the extent of the patient's anxiety. In experiments on cats Betz observed the following fact: if the sight of a stimulating object (for instance, a mouse) causes local CBF to rise, then the attack results in a drastic fall of blood flow below the initial level. A propos, a similar picture is in evidence when a cat restrained to the operating table recovers from superficial anesthesia and attempts to get free of the straps - local CBF sharply falls at this time below the initial level (Betz, 1975). During artificially provoked emotions the most profound blood flow increase occurred in cats in the pyriform gyrus (Sigurdsson et al., 1977; Delgado, Taigi, 1967) While employing the method of thermal clearance on free moving cats Betz (1975) demonstrated that occasional noise with the intensity of 50-100 db leads to blood flow elevation in the thalamus and hippocampus. Increase in the intensity of noise augments also the amplitude of blood flow increase until some maximum is reached. After repetitive noise stimulations the local CBF responses begin, but after a certain period, it attenuates and finally
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disappears provided the type of stimulus remains unaltered. Repetition of same stimulus in the subsequent days again elicits blood flow increase. Using the same technique for registering local CBF, Betz in his experiments on hungry cats observed blood flow increase when the cat caught sight of a mouse. In satiated cats blood flow response was much weaker or even absent altogether. The experiments described above indicate the existence of a strict relationship between the emotional state and the level of local CBF.
Chapter VIII
DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW REGULATION IN DIFFERENT BRAIN STRUCTURES DURING PERFORMANCE OF BEHAVIORAL ACTS 8.1. CHOICE OF THE EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS In studying the dynamics of cortical blood flow we used variations in functional and metabolic activity in the different brain structures of albino rats in response to functional load, which consisted of putting them in a complex maze. Utilization of various maze techniques in studies of behavioral responses and memory in animals was used at the beginning of the twentieth century and continues to be used to-date.
Figure 32. Construction of the maze.
The experiments used a variety of maze constructions; those which are the most convenient and simple for rats proved to be the one consisting of platforms suspended on supports as high as 30cm (Figure 32). This kind of construction allows it to be arbitrarily and readily modified as to its configuration, creating a more complex or simple task, these allowing observations on the animal’s behavior under various experimental conditions.
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By the method of trial and error the rat learns to move along the optimal trajectory, accomplishing this in several minutes to several seconds. Such a learning method was found to be most acceptable and fitting to the task at hand - since the blood circulation is known to be a relatively inert process it takes a definite lapse of time for its characteristic changes to be detected. The "T" and "U"-shaped mazes, which are commonly used in behavioral studies of electrophysiological correlates, were disregarded in our experiments. We used multi path mazes. In order to evaluate the process and the level of learning the following parameters were usually employed: number of errors made (i.e. number of deviation from the optimal route) and time it takes to go through the maze.
Recording of the Studied Parameters Using a simple electronic device, specially designed for this purpose, automatic recordings were made of trajectory of the animals movement through the maze and of the time of its stay on each of the platforms. The dynamics of lCBF (by means of electrochemical generation of hydrogen) and ECoG were recorded using the combined implanted electrodes (Figure 33). Coordinates in the atlas of Bures et al. (1967) were used for the implantation of electrodes in the frontal, motor, visual and temporal areas, as well as the intermediate between the areas of the cerebral hemispheres. Reference electrodes were fixed on the skull in the frontal and occipital areas. In addition, an electrode was sutured in the pectoral area for the purpose of recording the rate of heart beat.
Figure 33. Construction of the implanted electrode.
Experimental Technique On the fourth day of the electrode implantation and after testing their workability (according to a conventional CO2-test) animals were placed in the maze target-box. Recording of the indicated parameters were done prior to, in the process and after passage of the maze. In the first trial the animals were assisted in the search for an optimal runway from the start-place to the target-box, and later on they were learned on their own by trial and error. The experimental conditions remained constant. Three trials were run each day. Once "automatism" in passing through the maze was reached, the mazes configuration was
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modified and animals were allowed to relearn without any assistance on the part of the experimenter. Experiments were run for five days, the animals were then sacrificed and the localization of the electrodes verified. The process of learning occurred without food reinforcement. Every subsequent movement on the platform brings the animal to a novel situation and, is in its own right, a stimulus for a new movement ahead. It is assumed that coming upon a deadlock and needing to be returned to the beginning must be a very unpleasant event for the rat and it is perceived as a punishment for an error. While reaching the target-box, therefore not going through the nonethological conditions, is regarded as an essential reward - this serves as a motivation for forward moving through the maze. As shown in our results, such experimental conditions provide a sufficient level of motivation for learning. After about 6-7 trials rats on an average, less commit more than one error, i.e. they virtually attain the state of "automatism". Consequently, experimental conditions of this kind simulate the process of learning and serve as an accurate basis for studying the dynamics of lCBF in correlation with this process. Using the method of trial and error, which somewhat extended the time of learning and elaboration of "automatism", it also proved to be most adequate from the point of view of specifically studying the parameter local cerebral blood flow. Local CBF changes are known to be a relatively inertial process and a definite time interval is required for tracing them. Of course, this does not apply to conditions when damaging influences occur and the system responsible for lCBF regulation is able to react almost instantaneously, for example, to sharp changes in SAP. In a special series of experiments time-restricted model of blockade of cholinergic structures was used. For this purpose, rats were preliminarily injected intraperitoneally with anticholinergic drugs - amisyl (atropinelike) (15 mg/kg) or scopolamine (1 mg/kg). Before their injection, one control trial through the maze for each rat was made in order to obtain background records of the parameters under study. It is clear that with the construction we used a single trial could not result in the rat learning the optimal runway to the target-box. An injection of scopolamine was given by way of halantamine (5 mg/kg) or eserine (1 mg/kg). Choice of these drugs and their administration were used because it is well known that an amnesic effect is observed when anticholinergic drugs are injected before learning and it is absent when injected immediately after learning (Iljuchenok, 1972). It is also known that disturbance of prominent blockade of cholinergic structures, even in the case of i.v. injection, occurs in 1-2 minutes during which the process of memory trace consolidation is believed to be terminated. 20 min after injection, all animals were tested.
8.2. REDISTRIBUTION OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW IN DIFFERENT CORTICAL AREAS DURING MAZE TASK SOLUTION The process of maze learning itself was evaluated by variations in the number of errors made from trial to trial in search of the optimal runway to the target-box.
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Beginning with the third-fourth trial, in the process of learning an abrupt reduction of the number of errors was noted, it did not exceed 2-3, while from the sixth-seventh trial almost all the animals reached the state of "automatism" and, they passed the maze virtually without errors, the run taking them less than 8 sec. When the maze configuration was modified, the process of relearning was considerably faster (Figure 34) (presented in the figure are mean statisticals of learning curves).
Figure 34. Mean statistical curves of learning and relearning.
Figure 35. Dynamics of local blood flow in the motor zone of the rat's brain in the process of learning. II, VII and X - numbers of trials; arrows - the moment of the animal placing from the target-box to the starting place.
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Dynamics of local blood flow in the motor zone of the rat brain parietal cortex in the process of learning is given in Figure 35. Upper tracing of the figure reflects in a variation of lCBF, while the lower tracing reflects, as has been already pointed out, the trajectory of the rat's movement through the maze. Arrows designate the moment of the animal's placing again from the target-box to the starting place. The given figure shows the case in which the rat on the tenth trial on (the second day of learning session) ran through the maze without a single error. It becomes apparent that when the transfer of the animal from the target-box to the start place occurs, the lCBF starts to rise sharply. During the run through the maze the dynamics of lCBF appears to be strictly correlated with the animal's orientation reaction.
Figure 36. The results of multiple trials of rats at first through the maze of configuration M1 and then through the maze of a modified configuration M2. The left axis - number of committed errors; II, VI, X - numbers of trials during learning; I, IV - numbers of trials during relearning.
As soon as the rat ceases to continue to search for the runway and makes a stop on any platform, lCBF starts to decrease (independently of the overall motor activity, for example, during intensive "grooming"). Simultaneously when the rat begins again to search for the way lCBF again starts to rise. Only when the animal arrives at the target-box does it slowly return to its initial level. In the second, third and subsequent trials, not only is there a reduction in the number of errors and a shortening of time it takes to run the maze, but there is a decrease in the amplitude of lCBF increase and duration of its changes. During the "automatized" maze passage, lCBF rise becomes stabilized on a steady level which is considerably lower than the maximal deviation of lCBF from the initial level, which occurred in the first trials. If under these conditions, i.e. during "automatized" behavior of rats, one alters the configuration of the maze, thereby disturbing the elaborated stereotype, and in attempting to offer the animal a new task, there occurs a sharp rise in lCBF and in the process of relearning the same dynamics of alteration of lCBF pattern as was observed during the initial learning. Figure 36 represents the results of multiple trials of rats first through the maze of one configuration
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(M1) and then through the maze of a modified configuration (M2). The left axis shows the number of committed errors, while the right shows lCBF changes in conventional units. Abscissa shows time. Thick lines on the axis reflect respectively change of the number of errors from trial to trial (the tenth trial with no errors), deviation of lCBF and time of the run through the entire maze. As in the previous figure, here too, in parallel with the process of learning one can clearly see a reduction of the level of lCBF variation with the stabilization of the level attained in the tenth trial. However, simultaneously with the modification of the maze configuration, lCBF again sharply increases in strict correlation with the number of errors. Patterns of the ECoG spectrograms, obtained from the parietal area (from the site where lCBF recording was made) of the cerebral cortex during quiet wakefulness of the animal in the target-box and during resolution of the maze task are presented in Figure 37. As seen in this figure, during the search for the runway through the maze the ECoG shows synchronization in the theta-rhythm range (Figure 37B), although not infrequently its complete desynchronization is also observed (Figure 37C).
Figure 37. Electrocorticogram (ECoG) spectrograms obtained from the parietal area of the cerebral cortex during passive wakefulness of the animal in the target-box (A) and during resolution of the maze (B,C).
Table 8. Statistical reliability of the observed dynamics of local Cerebral Blood Flow
1 2 3
Charcter of the lCBF changes Increasing of lCBF during maze learning Mitigation of the amplitude of lCBF increasing (from trial to trial) Secondary increasing pf lCBF during relearning
P< 0.05 0.05 0.05
Reproducibility of the results, described above, concerning the dynamics of lCBF in all cases of localization of the electrodes in the motor zone of the cortex was 95%. Results of
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nonparametric evaluation of statistical reliability of the dynamics of lCBF in the experiments on 60 rats are given in Table 8. In the very first stages of maze learning a similar dynamic of lCBF takes place in the visual area of the cerebral cortex as well (Figure 38). However, it is distinct from the motor area (Figure 39), when the state of automatism in maze run is reached (X trial in the given figures) no increase in lCBF occurs.
Figure 38. lCBF dynamics in the visual area of the cerebral cortex. II-X - numbers of trials. White triangles designate the moments of the animal placing to the start place, semyblack - the moments of begining of movement in maze; black - end of maze task.
Figure 39. Same as in Figure 38, but for the motor area of the brain cortex.
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Simultaneous recording of lCBF in the parietal and frontal areas (or visual and frontal) has revealed that in the process of maze passage a rise in lCBF in the parietal and visual areas is accompanied by its drop in the frontal area (Figure 40). At the same time, the prominence of the decrease is mitigated from trial to trial. As to the temporal area and the sites between the frontal and parietal areas, no changes in lCBF were found to occur there.
Figure 40. Simultaneous recording of lCBF in the parietal and frontal areas. (A) - 8% CO2-test; (B) resolution of the maze task. Designations are same as in Figure 38.
8.3. POSSIBLE MECHANISMS OF THE CORTICAL BLOOD FLOW RESPONSES DURING FUNCTIONAL LOADS It is evident that the physiological mechanism of acquiring maze habits may be considered as a complex conditioned instrumental reflex, whose external manifestation is a number of movements conditioned by the design of the maze. In conventional maze experimentation, a hungry rat is placed at the entrance, it starts to wander through different sections of the maze and comes upon deadlocks before it eventually gets to the feeder. The animal's tendency is to make fewer and fewer errors and spend less and less time from start to the target, by more often avoiding deadlocks and, eventually, achieving the state of "automatism" and he can then run the entire route in a few seconds. There is a school of zoopsychologists who consider that a rat's behavior in the maze boils down to the formation of simple connections between stimulus and responses. According to this school, learning consists in consolidation of one connections and impairment of the others. In terms of the "stimulus-response" scheme a rat in the process of learning in the maze responds to a number of external stimuli, such as for example: light, sound, smell, etc., leaving a trace in its organs of sense. They are supplemented by a number of internal stimuli arriving from the visceral system and from the skeletal musculature. These external and
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internal stimuli determine the orientation reaction, walking, running, turning round, alertness, etc. Yet some schools exist which regard learning to consist not only in the formation of a connection of the stimulus-response type, but in the formation in the nervous system of "sets", which act like cognitive maps. Such experiments usually fall into five basic types: 1) latent learning; 2) vicarial (substituting) trial and error; 3) experiments for exploration of a stimulus; 4) experiments with hypotheses; 5) experiments for spatial orientation (Tolman, 1980). Learning which was not manifested until the presentation of food occurred referred to as "latent". A simple illustration of learning of this type is shown in the following experiment. A Y-shaped maze with two hole-boxes is used. At the right end a bowl containing water is placed, and at the left, food. Prior to each experiment rats are given water and food. They pass through the maze, and are returned to the cage with other animals. In a critical experiment rats are divided into two groups: one is deprived of food, the other is deprived of water. It appeared from the first trial the subgroup of hungry rats ran to the left end, while the thirsty subgroup ran to the right end (Tolman, 1980). These results indicate that under conditions of preliminarily nondifferentiated and very faintly reinforced experiments animals nevertheless learn the location of water-bowl and food-bowl. The term "vicarious trial and error", has been proposed by Muenzinger (1939) for the definition of irresolute behavior: the animals time and again return to one or another section as if being "keen on" choosing before they actually took one or another route. We will not deal here with other kinds of experiments, since they in fact, have no relation to the method employed by us in learning studies. From the foregoing it is evident that no matter whether the animal receives a food reward or not, it learns to find the shortest path leading to the target. The difference lies in the duration of the course of learning process. In the design of the maze employed there were several platforms erected over the experimental ground (as high as 30 cm), and the process of learning with no food reinforcement was evaluated. Every passage to the next cross-ways (when the animal has the possibility of choosing which direction to go in) appears to be stimulus enough for continuing on ahead. Reaching a deadlock necessitates being returned back, and must be perceived by the animals as a punishment for an error, and it seems to elicit in them unpleasant sensations which in turn make the rats avoid deadlocks and encourage exploring the way leading to the target. Getting rid of nonethologic a condition (staying in the maze) serves as a motivation for moving forward through the maze. As it is evident from the results we have obtained that experimental conditions provide the sufficient level of motivation for learning and, after about 6-7 trials rats commit on an average less than one error, i.e. they actually achieve the state of "automatism". Thus, in summing up it can be said that the experimental conditions which we employed provided for the process of learning, which means that they were able to serve as a accurate basis for studying the dynamics of local CBF in relation to the indicated process. Other than the vicarial method of trial and error, though it somewhat increased the process of learning. Acquisition of "automatism" proved to be the most acceptable for us in view of the specificity of the basic parameter under study, i.e. local CBF.
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In our experiments, even when the animal achieved the state of "automatism", the time spent for the run through the maze (6-8 sec) appeared to be sufficient to reveal essential changes in the dynamics of local blood flow in the cortical areas under study. Our experiments yielded statistically significant results indicating that in the course of solution of maze task in the cerebral cortex of albino rats the dynamics of local blood flow is as follows: 1. Blood flow increases in the parietal area; 2. It decreases in the frontal area; 3. It remains invariable in the intermediate areas, as well as in the temporal area; 4. As learning proceeds, profound changes in local blood flow attenuate; 5. After the passage through the maze local blood flow virtually returns to the initial level; 6. After full learning and the state of "automatism" is achieved local CBF in the course of passage through the maze changes only in the motor zone of the parietal cortex. Despite the decrease in local blood flow, oxygen tension appears to be invariable in the frontal area. Let us attempt to make a comprehensive analysis of the effects. Both from the point of view of cause consequence relationship and in investigating the mechanisms responsible for the patterns of local blood flow as described above. With Ingvar (1975) Gross et al., (1980), Olesen (1971) and some other authors, under conditions of enhanced motor activity local blood flow undergoes substantial increase in the structures responsible for the sensorimotor control. However, as was demonstrated in our experiments the motor activity that is not related with the orientation in the maze (for instance, during intensive grooming) local blood flow even decreases in the parietal area, though this usually occurs in the face of already increased level of blood flow. One does see changes in blood flow in the animals which are not performing motor activity (for instance, while they make a stop at cross-way in the maze). Thus, the patterns of local blood flow we have described above accompanying the process of complex maze task solution can hardly be associated with the animal's locomotion. By the way, this should be obvious also by the fact that a gradual attenuation of magnitude of its changes from trial to trial, though the movement of the animal through the maze appears to be less intensive in the first trials than in the subsequent ones. A special analysis was made in order to establish the possible correlation between the dynamics of lCBF and the heart rate. Superinposition of the corresponding cross-correlation functions has yielded an unequivocal answer - there is virtually no presumed correlation between the examined parameters. In investigations devoted to the analysis of the dynamics of cerebral blood flow in man and animals in response to emotional stimuli (Delgado, Taigi, 1967; Betz, 1975) an increase of local blood flow was shown to occur in the thalamus, the hypothalamus and the pyriform gyrus. Moreover, from stimulus to stimulus (as in our case from trial to trial in the maze) pronounceness of blood flow responses is reduced and with invariable type of stimulus they even disappear altogether. Let us analyze the results of our own studies also from this angle, i.e. from the motivational-emotional aspect of behavior. I.P.Pavlov expressed a view that the process of formation and disturbance of dynamic stereotype - of the stable system of animal's and humans' responses to environmental stimuli, should be accompanied by generation of emotions.
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Extending this view, Osipov (1924) introduced a concept on "emotional stage" of the conditioned reflex as distinct from "cognitive intellectual stage" on the way to perfection of the reflex at its second stage of formation. The first stage of the conditioned reflex formation is characterized by generalized influences within vegetative sensory and motor spheres (Simonov, 1975), i.e. emotions actually present the state of general mobilization of vegetative and energy resources of the body. Vegetative shifts are more pronounced in the cardiovascular system (Sokolov et al., 1980). The first stage in the maze task learning as a behavioral act is seen in the scheme given below: MOTIVATION + EMOTION + ACTION which during acquisition of automatism in movement renders as: MOTIVATION + ACTION At this time the emotional component is eliminated, though disturbance in the dynamic stereotype of behavior instantly resumes the emotional component in the response to the orientation reaction elicited by this disturbance. After repeatedly trying to change the dynamic stereotype special systems of processes thus create a definite alternation in the reaction which accounts in its turn for a rapid solution of the task (Alexeev, 1977), for example, this occurs upon altering the configuration of the maze. Let us consider the redistribution of local CBF obtained in our maze learning studies on rats. The dynamics of local blood flow will be considered as a vegetative component of emotional tension arising during orientation reactions. At the initial stage of learning with specific signs of generalized effects in the sensory, motor and vegetative spheres there occurs a maximal enhancement in the level of local blood flow in the parietal area and attenuation in the frontal area of the cerebral cortex. Beginning with the 3rd-4th trials, as habits are being consolidated and a dynamic stereotype formed, the amplitude of blood flow changes appear to decrease both in the parietal and frontal areas. Changes in blood flow have a hypercompensatory character - recovery of the initial level after the animal's return to the target-box lasts long (as compared to either its increase or decrease). This once again tends to support the possibility that the local CBF changes are to be considered as a vegetative component of emotional tension. According to Simonov's scheme, in the automatized state the emotional component disappears and therefore, one should expect a complete vanishing of the effects of either an increase or a decrease in local CBF. The same as was the case in the visual area (Mitagvaria, 1983). However, in the parietal area, following the attainment of the automatism state there was still evidence of a stable increase in blood flow. In these experiments local blood flow measurements were made in the motor zone of the parietal cortex. Therefore the residual increase in it was thought to be due to the motor activity of the animal and the resultant enhancement of the level of functional activity in the area under study, i.e. due to the coupling of "function+metabolism+blood flow". We therefore came to the conclusion that
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the pattern of local blood flow which was recorded in the process of learning represents the superposition of two effects - 1) the vegetative component of emotional tension and 2) enhancement of metabolism as a result of general motor activity. It should be noted that the first gradually disappears in the course of consolidation of habits, while the other persists. Consequently, when functional changes are accompanied by emotional tension increase, the patterns of local flow changes in the parietal and visual areas of the cerebral cortex and it may have a two-component character which reflect: a) changes in the emotional sphere and b) changes in the functional-metabolic activity. At the same time, the prominence of the first component, particularly at the initial stages of learning (or during first functional trials), may tangibly mask the manifestation of the latter component. Evaluation of the data in the literature cited above indicates that blood flow changes in individual brain structures occur in the face of virtually invariable global blood flow within the brain. Consequently, these changes must be provided by local redistribution of blood from the brain areas involved and is consequence of the law of blood flow continuity. As suggested by our findings, an increase in local bloodflow in the parietal area is parallelled by its decrease in the frontal area. Moreover, the dynamics of this decrease from trial to trial in the maze makes a virtual mirror reflection of what is occurring in the parietal area. As automatism is being acquired in behavior, local blood flow in the frontal area is not in fact altered. Proceeding from the known coupling of "function-metabolism-blood flow", decreases in the level of the latter component should indicate the decrease of the level of activity of the previous ones. On what neurophysiological premises can one claim that the functional activity in the frontal area of the cerebral cortex under the experimental conditions decreases? Analysis of the available literature concerning the functional activity of the brain during performance of behavioral acts indicates that there is a sufficient body of evidence for the existence of a correlation between the neuronal activity and the various aspects of behavior the environment, locomotion, target. In the majority of cases investigations of this kind were undertaken within the framework of knowledge relating to the specific functions of individual areas of the brain, therefore the neuronal population whose activity is related: a) with performance of definite movements are usually studied in the "motor" structures (Evarts, 1973) b) with properties of the environment - in the respective projection areas (Supin, 1981), c) with motivation or target behavior, in the so-called "motivational" structures (Mountcastle. at al., 1975; Rolls et al ., 1976), etc. Thus, an understanding is reached about the specific localization of neurons and their links with the various aspects in the relationship between the organism and the environment. In this context we are interested in the neuronal mechanisms of the involvement of the frontal and motor areas of the cerebral cortex and its control of complex voluntary movements. These mechanisms have been studied in primates for a number of years. Thus, Kubota and Niki (1971) while observing delayed reactions have demonstrated that efferent neurons modify their activity at different stages of the behavioral act: 2/3 of neurons from the frontal cortex become activated immediately after the termination of the delay period, whereas the activity of 1/3 of the neurons are enhanced throughout the delay period.
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Sakai (1978) has investigated the activity of cortical neurons in monkeys which lie between the frontal and motor zones during the process of learning visual discrimination. The animal was given the opportunity to press the lever, thereby increasing the strength applied. When the needed strength was achieved, a red light corresponding to the increased strength (I phase) was alternated by green light (II phase, corresponding to the needed strength) Four types of neurons were found: Type "A" neurons were activated as compared to the background in the first phase, while in the second phase (when intended strength was achieved) the activity of type "A" neurons attenuated; the activity of type "B" neurons enhanced in the second phase in the period corresponding to the required strength; type "C" in the second phase a reliable attenuation was observed in the neuronal activity and finally, type "D", the activity was enhanced from the moment of delivery of a warning signal and continued until the termination of the second phase. Such variability in neuronal activity is attributed to the visual stimuli (illumination and change of the valve light), and not to the motor activity, i.e. it is associated by him to the mental functions. In 1979 Orlov and his associates conducted a study of neuronal responses from the temporal cortex to signals of behavioral schedule with food as reinforcement. The animal (monkey) was placed in a primate armchair. The experiment was comprised of two parts. The first was instructive, during which a system of signals (instructions) were delivered to the animal, and the other part was that of triggering, during which the animal had a possibility to realize the given task, i.e. to perform a goal-directed movement and, receive a food reinforcement equivalent to the success of the action performed. The instructive part of the schedule fell into four stages: 1) a warning signal (fixation of attention throughout the experiment); 2) a period of anticipation of a conditioned signal (nonspecific anticipation); 3) presentation of a conditioned signal; 4) anticipation of a triggering signal or delay (specific anticipation). In the first stage, modulation of activity was noted in 64% of neurons, among them 27% showed inhibition of the spontaneous activity, 23% - a complete suppression of the spontaneous activity, in 8% there was augmentation of the activity and in 6% of the neuron populations phasic excitatory reaction was noted. The warning signal, in addition to fixing the attention, oriented the animal to begin to count the time until the impending conditioned signal (irrespective of its peculiarities). Therefore, tonic reorganization of the spontaneous activity of neurons in the frontal cortex during a fixed period of nonspecific anticipation may be the reflection of mnemonic processes during conditioned temporal reflex performance (Batuev, 1981). In the second stage of instructive part of the schedule the activity of 32% of neurons did not differ from the background activity, a decrease in discharge rate was seen in 57% of neurons and 11% of cells generated one-two waves of enhanced of activity. In comparison with the neurons of the frontal cortex, in the motor area the author failed to reveal any reliable consistency in the character of reorganization of the activity, therefore, the described reactions are of rather nonspecific nature. In the third stage, the discharge rate increased in 17% of neurons, in 15% the response of inhibitory type was observed, while in 10% a complete or partial suppression of activity was in evidence. As a whole, in this stage the predominance of inhibitory reaction was noted in about 34% of the neurons.
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In the fourth stage there is a periodic short-lasting burst activity either in a different neuron population at the onset of delay (in the middle or at its end), or in one and same neurons. Only 5% of the cells appeared to be in the activated state throughout the entire delay. A triggering part of the schedule consisted of the switching on of the signal (removing of the screen), performance of a goal-directed movement (pressing the key) and procuring of food. In other words, removal of the screen offered the animal a possibility to realize the preliminarily formulated on the basis of instructions of the behavioral schedule, i.e.accomplish adequate choice of reinforcing key and pressing it. In this part of the experiment modulation of activity in 64% of neurons is classified as the following types: phasic augmentation of activity, tonic augmentation and tonic attenuation of activity. The number of neurons from the frontal cortex with the attenuated activity (in response to a triggering signal) appeared to be almost twice as many as those with augmented activity (40% and 24%, respectively). Thus in the course of almost the entire experiment (until the choice of keys) in the overwhelming majority of cases the neuronal activity in the frontal area is attenuated as compared to the background. In the final phase of the experiment when the animal chooses the right key (it receives food as a reward) the neuronal activity becomes augmented, while in the case of an incorrect choice (without food reinforcement) the activity remains at the background level. In a similar experiment the same authors (Orlov et. al., 1979) found no essential modulation of neuronal activity in the temporal areas. In an insignificant number of neurons from the temporal area they succeeded in finding the responses similar to those of frontal neurons. It may then be concluded that the level of functional activity in the frontal cortex both in the instructive and triggering parts of the schedule appears to be attenuated as compared to the background. It should be reemphasized that these results were obtained in primates. While studying redistribution of blood flow in the brain in humans, Ingvar (1975) found that the resting state is characterized by an increased level of blood flow in the frontal areas of the cerebral cortex. He termed this phenomenon to be "hyperfrontal syndrome ". During various functional loads the increased level of cerebral blood flow appeared to shift to the other cortical areas. Hence, the phenomenon of a decreased blood flow level in the frontal cortex during the performance of a unitary behavioral act seen by us in albino rats, occurs in human brain too. The above cited electrophysiological data, obtained in primates, confirm a decrease of the functional activity level in the frontal cortex under the same conditions. Comparison and analysis of data suggest that the coupling of "function-metabolismblood flow", established largely by clinical observations on humans, holds true for the animal brain as well. At the same time, we have already substantiated that at the initial stages of learning in rats when there is high level of emotional tension (that is attended by signs of generalized effects in the sensory, motor and vegetative spheres), blood flow response appears largely to be the manifestation of a vegetative component of emotional tension. Now we can add that these reactions do not contradict the functional-metabolic activity of other brain structures.
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That is, redistribution of blood flow within the cerebral cortex is implemented by the principle "function-metabolism-blood flow", but the effect is reinforced and supplemented by the reaction which arises from the sphere of emotional tension. Consistent with this concept is the data on the dynamics of oxygen tension in the frontal cortex. As demonstrated above, despite decrease in the blood flow levels, PO2 remains virtually at its original level, which, in our opinion, must indicate that in the given case there is a decrease in the level of its consumption, i.e. decrease of the level of functional-metabolic activity. Otherwise, decrease of the local blood flow level should have entailed attenuation of the level of tissue oxygen tension as well. While evaluating our findings there logically arose several questions. First, what is the character of redistribution of local blood ? And, secondly, what is the nature of the mechanism responsible for the redistribution? It is apparent that the experimental conditions used by us (the maze, composed of platforms) caused in animals a defense fear reaction. Let us turn again to the statement by Simonov (1975): "When in the state of fear the animal gives a preventive response to a number of stimuli, including those encountered in its life for the first time, the animal by no means relies on the awareness of reliable signs of the threat and the means of its prevention. Knowledge comes as a result of learning and choice, as a consequence of the process, in a definite sense counteracting emotions and on a definite stage liquidating it. Designation of fear (dominant) is to replace, compensate for the information deficit about the efficient means of protection". Thus, the significance of emotions in goal-directed behavioral reactions "does not boil down to more mobilization of the vegetative functions of the organism". Iljuchenok and Eliseeva (1967) have demonstrated that suppression of the cholinoreactive system of the brain by the central cholinolytics results in the blockage of the conditioned emotional defence reaction of fear with persistence of the unconditioned. In particular, they have blocked the muscarinic cholinoreactive structures by amisyl in the dose of 0.1-0.5 mg/kg and obtained elimination of the state of fear in dogs, although the reaction of rage remained unaltered. Amisyl is known to induce suppression of m-cholinoreceptors of the brain's reticular formation, exerting on the EEG a synchronizing influence. It has also a peripheral m-cholinoblocking action, though less prominent than that of the central m-cholino-receptors, and as a result of this, mitigate spasms of the oculomuscles (Kharkievich, 1980). In the present study we also made an attempt to employ a pharmacological method for the abolishment of the emotional reaction of animals. But before looking at the results, let us deal briefly with the basic principles of the pharmacological study of memory mechanisms.
8.4. DYNAMICS OF LCBF IN THE RAT'S CEREBRAL CORTEX FOLLOWING INJECTION OF ANTICHOLINERGIC DRUGS As been already stated, in our studies on the dynamic characteristics of the regulation of lCBF in the rat cerebral cortex during solution of maze tasks we applied blockades of cholinergic receptors by amisyl and scopolamine. Injection of amisyl led to a definite ECoG response consisting in the synchronization of slow waves (Figure 41). While at same time the process of learning appeared to be tangibly
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retarded (Figure 42-A) and there was a sharp fall in the magnitude of lCBF increases in the parietal cortex in the course of maze task solution (Figure 43-A). The pattern of lCBF, as a matter of fact, under these conditions, became similar to that observed under conditions of "automatic" behavior. Thus, the component of the lCBF pattern which, in our opinion, reflects emotional tension is abolished and manifests itself only with the component which is correlated with the motor activity. It must be assumed that with the amisyl injection we succeeded in abolishing the emotional defense reaction of fear (Iljuchenok, Eliseeva, 1967). As a result of this, an important link of conditioned reflex activity was excluded and this considerably prolonged the first stage of learning and concomitantly, the component of the lCBF pattern which under normal conditions, the emotional tension was naturally removed.
Figure 41. ECoG spectrograms obtained prior (B) and after (A) amizyl injection.
Figure 42. A mean statistical curves of learning after the action of scopolamine (S) and amisyl (A).
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Apart from amisyl, we have employed also another m-cholinoblocking agent scopolamine which in contrast to amizil blocks preferentially the pheripheric mcholinoreceptors located on the membrane of effector cells at the terminals of postganglionic cholinergic fibers (Kharkevich, 1980). As has already been pointed out above, in disturbing the psychical activity scopolamine is 10 times more active than atropine, while in respect to conditioned defense reactions, it is more than 30 times (Iljuchenok, 1972). In reference to the background of the action of atropine-like blockers there occurs a suppression of cholinergic influences on the heart and it begins to dominate the tone of adrenergic (sympathetic) innervation (Kharkevich, 1980). According to the data of Iljuchenok (1972), injection of scopolamine in our studies completely disturbed the process of learning (Figure 42-S). Repeated trials led to no results in fact the rats found the runway to the target-box only with the help of an experimenter. Simultaneously, as demonstrated in Figure 43-B, the effect of lCBF increase eliminated altogether and, ECoG, as in the case of amisyl, showed synchronization of high-voltage slow wave fluctuations (Figure 44).
Figure 43. Dynamics of lCBF in the cerebral cortex and trajectory of movement through the maze (track) before and after amisyl (A) and scopolamine (B) injection. II, III, XIII - numbers of trials.
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Figure 44. ECoG spectrograms obtained before (A) and after (B) scopolamine injection.
Why was there elimination of "residual" increase in lCBF when the animal's motor activity in the face of severe amnesia persisted entirely? In a special series of acute experiments on several groups of albino rats, which were under light hexanal anesthesia, a serial photomicrography of the pial arteries was made. The results of the measurements alone in two groups of arteries, those 20-50 mcm and 50-80 mcm in diameter are presented in Table 9. Table 9. Cerebrovascular effects of the scopolamine and halantamine administration Experimental conditions Control After injection of Scopolamine After injection of Halantamine
Diameters of the Pial Arteries (mcm) 29.66±1.88 59.72±3.47 16.91±1.50 37.50±2.94 26.66±2.05 54.16±3.14
As the statistical evaluation indicates, scopolamine leads to a reliable constriction of the lumen of the pial arteries 20-25 min after the drug injection. After subsequent injections of an anticholinergic drug antagonist (halantamine) the vascular lumen was virtually restored. In repetitive experiments introduction of the indicated antagonist of the anticholinergic blocker, as well as eserine, completely restored both the ECoG and the process of learning. At the same time, the pattern of lCBF change is entirely restored. The question of the role of cholinergic vasodilatation in the regulation of blood supply to the brain was already discussed in Section 1 of this book. We shall only note here that according to the described data the conclusions drawn are as follows: a) scopolamine, like amisyl, abolishes the emotional reaction and as a result, the pattern of lCBF described for normal conditions cannot occur; b) by blocking m-cholinoreceptors at the cholinergic fiber terminals, it disturbs the functional mechanism of dilatation of the pial arteries and as a result, during general motor activity no increase in local blood flow is observed in the motor zone of the parietal cortex, and c) by disturbing the balance in favor of adrenergic innervation,
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directed toward constriction, it brings the arterial system to a novel equilibrium with enhanced hemodynamic resistence. It is evident that the scopolamine-induced disturbance in the functional mechanism of the pial artery's dilatation should aggravate the development of the process of amnesia because of its psychotropic action. This fact once again confirms the significance of a neurogenic link in the mechanism regulating cerebral blood circulation under conditions which alter the emotional state of animals. One should investigate the phenomenon of local blood flow decreasing in the frontal lobe. It might be assumed that active vasodilatation of the pial arteries in the parietal area and the respective fall of hemodynamic resistance leads to a passive reflux of blood into the frontal area. If this is the case, then the decrease of local blood flow must have been observed in all zones embracing the parietal area. Actually, as the above data show, in all the zones, directly adjacent to the parietal cortex including the temporal area too, local blood flow remains unchanged both at the initial and final stages of learning. This vividly indicate that a decrease in local blood flow in the frontal area is an active process (as is its increase in the parietal area), i.e. decrease of local blood flow in the frontal area is likely to occur not only during a decrease in hemodynamic resistance in the parietal area, but also by active vasoconstriction in the frontal area. These contradictory processes seem to be developed simultaneously. Thus, the version of passive redistribution from the frontal to the parietal area is ruled out in view of the fact of vasodilation of the latter, otherwise a decrease in local blood flow should have occurred in all the zones surrounding the parietal area. Now let us look at the mechanism of active vasoconstriction in the frontal area and as a whole, the redistribution of blood flow in the cerebral cortex of albino rats while performing a maze task solution. Application of a potent antagonist of alpha-adrenoreceptors phenoxybenzamine in our experiments led to an abolishment of the effect of local blood flow decrease in the frontal area. In this case, the process is mediated by a mechanism of a neurogenic nature. Thus, it may be concluded that during functional loadings the local redistribution of blood flow from the brain areas less involved in the performance of that given behavioral act to those more implicated in it is accomplished by the active vasoconstriction and vasodilatation reactions in the relevant brain structures, developed concomitantly. Pharmacological denervation removes the emotional component of the lCBF changes, but leaves unaltered the functional-metabolic one. The former is accomplished through a neurogenic link, while the latter occurs through a metabolic link of regulation of blood supply to the brain. Moreover, the emotional component provides an excess of blood flow, disturbing qualitatively the coupling "function-metabolism-blood flow".
Chapter IX
DYNAMICS OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW AND OXYGEN TENSION IN THE BRAIN IN DIFFERENT PHASES OF THE SLEEP-WAKING CYCLE 9.1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Considerable changes have been observed in the emotional tension and the electrical activity of various brain structures during the transition from one stage of the sleepwakefulness cycle to another. The circulatory changes that occur are no less significant. One of the pioneering hypotheses on cerebral blood circulation during sleep was that of cerebral ischemia. It was derived from a purely inductive assumption that during sleep the cerebral activity decreases. Lack of adequate methods in verification of this hypothesis prevented ongoing work. In 1881 an attempt was made in which Mosso (1881) using plethysmography with great technical difficulties succeeded in recording, in three patients with an exposed skull, a decrease in CBF during sleep and while noting its increase in the extremities. The hypothesis on cerebral ischemia was confirmed. Tarkhanoff (1894) who observed the dog's pial vessels during sleep came to the same conclusion. Stewenson et al. (1929), while measuring intracranial pressure in patients during sleep, found an independent increase in SAP (decrease of the latter in sleep has been shown earlier (Brooks, Carrol, 1912; Landis, 1925). The increase in the intracranial pressure was attributed to cerebral vasodilatation. This hypothesis was corroborated by studies of Bridges et al. (1958) who registered the volume of cerebral vessels (together with other vascular beds) during sleep. Such acquired data allowed assumptions concerning cerebral blood circulation to be only indirect and offered no actual information about cerebral metabolism. Gibbs et al. (1935) having developed a method of measurement of venous outflow studied cerebral blood circulation in man during sleep. The studies failed to display any marked changes in CBF as compared to the state of wakefulness. In 1952 Dust and Schneider in healthy subjects measured the oxygen content of arterial blood in the state of wakefulness and in deep sleep. The latter appeared to be attended by anoxemia. Thus, there again emerged a problem of correlation of sleep and anoxia, however three years later Mangold et al., (1955)
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refuted these data. In their work the authors studied total CBF in 50 young healthy persons during sleep, not differentiating stages of paradoxical and slow wave sleep, yet the EEG data showed that study was made mainly during the slow wave stage of sleep. It was found that sleep leads to a marked rise of CBF (the method of Kety and Schmidt (1948) was employed). At the same time, a decrease in SAP was also recorded. It should be emphasized that the authors observed no changes in oxygen consumption (compared to wakefulness). Intensive electrophysiological studies of the sleep-wakefulness cycle indicate that the sleep stages are accompanied by redistribution of the neuronal activity in a variety of brain structures (Huttenlocker, 1961; Findley, Hayward, 1969; Hobson, McCarley, 1971; Oniani, 1980, Orem, Trotter, 1992; Braun et al., 1992; Lin et al., 2006). As has already been pointed out, shifts in the electrical activity of the brain should be attended by respective changes in energy metabolism, and they, in turn, by lCBF changes. Proceeding from these premises, Baust (1967) studied changes in local blood flow in rhombencephalic and mesencephalic areas of the brain stem during sleep (measurement were made by means of thermistors). During the paradoxical stage of sleep (PS) lCBF appeared to increase in the rhombencephalon and decrease in the mesencephalon. In slow wave sleep (SWS) the changes were not as significant, though still an increase in lCBF in the rhombencephalic reticular formation and a decrease in the mesencephalic reticular formation were recorded (compared to the levels of lCBF during wakefulness). Reivich et al., (1968), obtained the most essential data on the redistribution of blood flow in individual brain structures during the various phases of sleep. Using autoradiography for qualitative measurement of local blood flow (Kety et al., 1955), they studied a variety of brain structures in SWS and PS (with rapid eye movement - REM-sleep). Experiments were carried out on cats with preliminary sleep deprivation (24-28 hours). The most tangible changes in the lCBF level were detected in brain stem structures and less in the white matter, sensory and motor areas of the brain. This work of Reivich et al. is classical and in most reviews the results data analysis are as a rule compared with those of Reivich et al. The data obtained by Seylaz et al. (1971) is also of interest. They demonstrated that in PS there not only occurs an increase in lCBF (compared to SWS) but there is an abolishment of the spontaneous oscillations in the lCBF level (2-4 per min), observable in wakefulness and SWS. In the article of Roysel et al. (1980) the results are being challenged of Reivich et al. (1968). In particular, while using the thermoclearance technique it was demonstrated that during SWS local blood flow in the cerebellum and hypothalamus of rats is maintained on a high stable level and decrease occurs at the onset of each phase of arousal or PS, while during the end of PS phase lCBF markedly increases again. From the laboratory of Meyer a number of clinical observations are described (Meyer et al., 1980; Sakai et al., 1979; 1980). Cerebral haemodynamics in healthy persons were studied during sleep with those suffering from narcolepsia and insomnia. In these patients, the level of CBF in the gray matter of cerebellum and brain stem appeared to be reduced as compared to the control group. In narcoleptics, CBF was found to increase after having fallen asleep, while in patients with insomnia a greater decrease in the gray matter was noted. In both cases maximal changes are observed in the cerebellar and brain stem areas.
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In evaluating the various phases of sleep and its effect on cerebral blood circulation, the following observations were made: during sleep there is a considerable alteration in the level of local blood flow to various brain structures. The most dramatic changes are observed in PS. Many studies support the idea that to an augmentation in the neuronal activity in the PS in the cortex (Evarts, 1964; Hobson, McCarley, 1971), in the thalamus (Bizzi, 1966), the hippocampus (Noda et al., 1969; Oniani, 1980), the hypothalamus (Findley, Hayward, 1969) and in the brain stem (Huttenloker, 1961), occur and that this activity is greater than what is found in wakefulness. Knowing that the augmentation of the neuronal activity leads to the enhancement of metabolism, it should be realized that during sleep considerable changes must occur in the metabolic activity of individual structures and areas of the brain (unfortunately, there is no direct data yet to be found that indicates accurately the level of the brain's metabolic activity during sleep). We again conclude that recording of lCBF may furnish us valuable information concerning the level of the functional-metabolic activity of brain structures. This question becomes extremely important when studying the sleep phenomenon. Since such an experiment tangibly restricts the possibility of an experimenter. It should be also added that the state of excitability in the brain structures may be accompanied not only by impulse activity, but also by change of slow electrical potentials (Sergeev et al., 1968), that significantly impede the identification of the functional state of this or another structure. For example, it may said that a well-known phenomenon of hypersynchronization of thetarhythm in the dorsal hippocampus in the PS (Jouvet, 1967; Oniani et al., 1970) has been diversely interpreted - there is no specific opinion as to whether it points to enhancement of the hippocampal functional activity or it is just the contrary, it is indicative of its attenuation. In our studies of cats the dynamics of local blood flow and oxygen tension was noted in the dorsal hippocampus and sensorimotor area of the cortex (SMC) in different phases of the sleep-wakefulness cycle. We, along with others, start from the fact, that the dynamics of oxygen tension in nerve tissue is a parameter whose frequency of fluctuations reflects to a considerable extent the intensity of the metabolic processes in neuro-glial populations and should therefore be the carrier of important information about the functional state of nervous structures (Snezhko, 1960; Berezovskii, 1978; Grechin, Kropotov, 1979).
9.2. LOCAL BLOOD FLOW AND PO2 CHANGES IN THE DORSAL HIPPOCAMPUS AND SENSORIMOTOR CORTEX DURING SLEEP-WAKEFULNESS CYCLE Experiments were performed on adult cats of either sex with chronically implanted electrodes in the dorsal hippocampus and the sensorimotor cortex. Apart from oxygen tension and local blood flow, we have recorded the electrical activity of the indicated structures and electrooculogram. Since spontaneous oscillations of PO2 in brain tissue are attributed to the class of stochastic-statistical processes (Moskalenko et al., 1969), therefore for their quantitative estimation we have used autocorrelation functions, calculated during sufficiently prolonged (compared to the period of oscillations) intervals of time (Nikolaishvili et al.,
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1983). In different phases of the sleep-wakefulness cycle in the symmetric sites of the dorsal hippocampus and the sensorimotor cortex the spontaneous oscillations of PO2 and the difference in their patterns were recorded, examples of which are given in Figure 45. It was found that oscillations of PO2 have a complex - polymorphic character which differ in both shape and its amplitude, in the ratio of duration of ascending and descending phases. It appears that during transition from one phase of the cycle into another parameters of PO2 rhythmics undergo marked changes and that every level of wakefulness and sleep is characterized by definite patterns of these oscillations. As a result of autocorrelation analysis three groups of periodic and quasiperiodic constituents of PO2 rhythms with periods: 21.61±0.3; 60.7±0.7; and 123.4±1.1 s (Figure 46A, B and C) were obtained.
Figure 45. Oscillation of oxygen tension in the dorsal hippocampus and sensorimotor cortex in the state of quiet wakefulness.1 - PO2 in the sensorimotor cortex; 2 and 3 - PO2 in the left and right dorsal hippocampus.
Figure 46. Autocorrelation function of PO2 oscillations in the dorsal hippocampus and sensorimotor cortex. On abscissa - time intervals, on ordinate - correlation coefficient.
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Furthermore, we recorded PO2 oscillations whose autocorrelograms had no periodic constituents (Figure 46D). Analysis of the obtained autocorrelograms showed that during the transition from active wakefulness to passive, and then to slow wave sleep there is a considerable slow-down of PO2 oscillations in the dorsal hippocampus. While during the transition to PS, at the moment of strong development of a hippocampal theta-rhythms, the frequency of PO2 oscillations again increases and practically recovers to the initial frequency of PO2 oscillations occurring during active wakefulness (Figure 47). As far as PO2 waves with a period 60.7+0.7 s are concerned, irregardless of the phase of the sleep-wakefulness cycle, their occurrence in PO2 oscillations is very similar to the dorsal hippocampus (Figure 47). Statistical data characterizing the emergence of PO2 waves of various duration in the dorsal hippocampus in the sleep-wakefulness cycle are presented in Table 10.
Figure 47. Percent ratio of periodic constituents of PO2 oscillations in the dorsal hippocampus in active wakefulness (AW), passive wakefulness (PW), slow wave phase of sleep (SWS) and the REM stage of sleep. Mean periods of oscillations: I - 22 s, II - 61 s, III - 123 s.
Table 10. Frequency of manifestation of the different periodic and quaiperiodic constituents of the PO2-iscillations during Sleep-Wakefulness cycle Brain structures
Dorsal Hippocampus Sensorymotor Cortex
Periods of oscillation (seconds) 21.6+/-2.7 60.7+/-0.7 123.4+/-1.3 21.6+/-0.3 60.7+/-0.7 123.4+/-1.3
Frequency (%) during: Wakefulness Sleep Passive Active REM SWS 29.4+/-2.7 39.4+/-4.4 42.4+/-1.3 19.8+/-2.1 45.8+/-2.8 46.2+/-3.5 43.8+/-0.9 47.1+/-1.6 24.8+/-1.3 15.1+/-4.5 16.8+/-0.7 33.1+/-2.2 26.8+/-3.9 28.9+/-4.7 29.1+/-2.3 17.8+/-3.7 46.4+/-2.1 47.3+/-2.3 50.4+/-1.0 41.1+/-3.1 26.8+/-4.4 23.3+/-3.4 20.5+/-1.7 41.1+/-3.1
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Figure 48. Dynamics of recorded parameters in the hippocampus during SWS, PS and arousal (A). Electrocorticogram (1), oculogram (2), electrical activity in the left and right dorsal hippocampus (3), local blood flow in the hippocampus (4); thick line in blood flow lane - 20 seconds.
Figure 49. Dynamics of recorded parameters in the dorsal hippocampus during the transition from SWS to PS. Designations the same as in the previous figure.
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Under the same experimental conditions, we recorded the dynamics of local blood flow in the dorsal hippocampus. Figure 48 represents such an example. In the curve of local blood flow in the dorsal hippocampus (4) arrows indicate the regions to which the patterns of electrical activity correspond to SMC (1), the left and right dorsal hippocampus (3) and electrooculograms (2). The figure illustrates the transition from SWS to PS, then to SWS and finally arousal (A) of the animal. As seen from the recordings, the hippocampal blood flow increases dramatically during the transition from SWS to PS and its level approximate the state of wakefulness. The REM (rapid eye movements) state in PS as a rule appears to correspond to the plateaux of maximally increased blood flow, i.e. the process of a sharp increase of lCBF itself precedes the development of REM. This is most vividly illustrated in Figure 49. Under the same experimental conditions in the dorsal hippocampus, the same parameters were recorded in the sensorimotor area of the cortex. Changes in the frequency of these oscillations in the sleep-wakefulness cycle appeared to be in general the same as in the hippocampus. Some distinction is noted in the changes of rhythms with a period 60.7-0.7s in the sensorimotor cortex. In SWS its content in PO2 oscillations decrease, while in PS it increases (Figure 50) Statistical data characterizing the emergence of PO2 waves of various duration in the somatosensory cortex in the sleep-wakefulness cycle are presented in Table 10.
Figure 50. Percent ratio of periodic constituents of PO2 oscillations in the sensimotor cortex in different phase of the sleep-wakefulness cycle. Designations the same as in Figure 47.
The general characteristic of changes in local blood flow in SMC appears to be similar to that described above for the dorsal hippocampus. However, as distinct from the latter, changes in lCBF are less pronounced in SMC (Figure 51). And in this case the state of REM develops against the background of maximal increase of lCBF in PS which corresponds to the level of lCBF in active wakefulness (AW) and exceeds that observable in passive wakefulness (PW) (Figure 52). In the last decade work appeared in which authors used indices which reflect, to some extent, the intensity of metabolic activity, in order to estimate the functional states of various
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brain structures. In particular, some investigators employed the dynamics of PO2 in the cortex and subcortical structures as a correlative of the activity of nervous system in the sleep-wakefulness cycle (Garsia-Aust et al., 1968; Velutti, Monti, 1976; Ricardo et al., 1977) At the same time, many authors have shown the dependence of the character of PO2 oscillations on the level of functional activity of the examined brain structure. In particular, it has been experimentally confirmed that elevation in the functional activity of the given brain tissue region is accompanied by an increase in the frequency of PO2 oscillations in it and vice versa (Meyer, Porthnoy, 1959; Grechin, 1974; Zaguskina, Zaguskin, 1974; Moskalenko et al., 1975). This is also confirmed by our data on the dynamics of PO2 and lCBF in the sensorimotor cortex. It is known that in AW and PS when ECoG shows desynchronization the functional activity in the neocortex is enhanced, whereas in PW it is attenuated, reaching the lowest level in SWS (Oniani, 1980). In the present experiments, both in AW and PS, i.e. in the phases when the functional activity of the cortex is the highest, in PO2 oscillations there is an increase in the waves with a mean period 21.6+0.3s, while in PS and especially in SWS their content sharply decreases and oscillation with a mean period 123.4+1.1s start dominating. Consequently, it may be concluded that such a change in PO2 oscillation frequency is a reflection of shifts in the functional-metabolic activity of the cortex, the direction of which indicates phases of the sleep-wakefulness cycle and is interpreted unequivocally - that there is an increase in AW and PS and a decrease in PW and SWS.
Figure 51. Dynamics of local blood flow in the sensimotor cortex (4) and electrical indices during SWS, PS and A. Designations the same as in Figure 48.
A similar conclusion is drawn also from our data on the dynamics of lCBF in SMC. Thus, the results obtained in our studies of the somatosensory cortex, the area whose functional state in our experimental conditions was a priori known, makes certain the correctness of the criteria selected by us for estimating the functional state of the dorsal hippocampus. Consequently, in AW and PS when one can observe a clear-cut hypersynchronization of theta-rhythm, an increase in the PO2 oscillation frequency and a sharp elevation of the level of local blood flow, the functional activity of the hippocampus is enhanced. While in PW and SWS it is suppressed, since at these states PO2 oscillations become infrequent and the level of lCBF, as compared to that in PS, falls.
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Thus, our studies on the dynamics of lCBF and nerve tissue oxygen tension indicate that: the functional-metabolic activity of the brain appears to be on the same maximal level in AW and PS. Minimal level is reached in SWS and the transient phase - PW; during hypersynchronization in the dorsal hippocampus the functional-metabolic activity sharply augments: a maximal level of lCBF is attained in the stage of "rapid eye movements" in PS.
Figure 52.The same as in Figure 51, but in the stage of PW and PS.
Reduction in the lCBF level during the transition from the state of wakefulness to SWS, corroborates findings of Risberg, Ingvar (1973) and Townsend et al., (1973), but is found to be diametrically opposed to the results obtained by Mangold et al.(1955); Seylas et al. (1975). In attempting to explain, the difference one has, perhaps, to look at the methods used for recording lCBF. The latter authors in their studies employed a thermometric technique with the use of thermocouples. One of the essential drawbacks, which should be considered, is the possibility of incorrect results of CBF measurements during changes in the metabolic activity (which is known to lead to local changes of temperature in tissue). In addition, Seylaz himself considers that "it would be surprising if the metabolism of the cortex in the waking state was slower then during SWS..." (Seylaz et al., 1975, p. 242) and, failing to find any logical explanation for his experimental results, he attributes it to the manifestation of neural regulation. However, there emerges a question - why should neural regulation increase blood flow in the brain during the transition from a high functions and metabolic activity to a lower one? Similar objections concerning CBF decrease during the transition from the stage of SWS to wakefulness occurs with Seylaz. Therefore, it may be concluded that the reason for the discrepancy in the results may be due to incorrect use of the thermometric method for lCBF measurement. Table 11. Some parameters of arterial blood (Reivich et al., 1969)
Wakeful animals (control) SWS REM Sleep
PCO2 34+/-2.9 31+/-1.8 32+/-1.2
PO2 102+/-8.4 84+/-0.7 85+/-1.3
pH 7.44+/-0.01 7.43+/-0.02 7.44+/-0.02
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Evaluation of the mechanisms, which provide the above-described changes in local blood flow in the sensorimotor cortex and dorsal hyppocampus, our experimental findings, did not permit us to arrive at any concrete conclusions. Therefore, we will resort to the data of other authors. In particular, Reivich et al. (1969) in the experiments on cats measured PO2, PCO2 and pH in the arterial blood during wakefulness, SWS and in the stage of "REM" in PS (see Table 11). As is seen from the table, changes in the mentioned parameters of the arterial blood are not very essential during the transition from one stage of the sleep-wakefulness cycle to the other and can hardly play any role in lCBF reduction in SWS and its increase in PS. One ought also to rule out the effect of SAP, since in sleep stages (namely in SWS) the most typical change in SAP, as mentioned above, is its reduction. Data on the dynamics of cardiac expulsion in PS are not in correlation with lCBF either (Reivich et al., 1969). Therefore, it in reasonable to resort to the known coupling "function - metabolism - blood flow". That is, it must be thought that the changes in lCBF during the transition from one phase of the sleep-wakefulness cycle to another are entirely and completely determined by local functional metabolic shifts. However, how does closure of the feedback loop occur in this case, is it via direct action of the products of metabolism on the cerebral vessels or is it mediated through the neural mechanisms? This is an open question thus far.
SECTION 4: CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW, OXYGEN SUPPLY, AND MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES INDUCED BY LOCAL HYPERTHERMIA
Chapter X
DYNAMICS OF LOCAL CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW DURING MICROWAVE RADIATION From what was stated in Section I it is obvious that the neurogenic link plays a paramount role in the regulation of blood supply to the brain. In the past several decades data appeared permitting arguments concerning the existence of the centers (or a center) subserving the regulation of cerebral blood circulation (Molnar, Seylaz, 1965; Moskalenko, 1967). In Moskalenko's monograph (1967) he considers that "... it is difficult to say anything definitely about the principles of functioning and localization of the center or a system of centers of regulation. It may be only affirmed here that this center (or centers) should receive message about the state of inputs and outputs of the system" (p.197). Thirteen years later, Moskalenko (1980) had again to substantiate that "... the accumulated material allows one to make an inference that the central nervous formation does play a definite role in the regulation of cerebral blood circulation. The most convincing data is that which indicates modulation of the cerebral vascular responses to adequate stimuli upon the transection of or damage to certain brain structures. However, the question of the existence of a structurally determinated center for the regulation of cerebral blood circulation, is not to be answered at this time" (pp.107-108). What are the experimental prerequisites, which underlie these statements? In a number of studies, it was demonstrated that electrical stimulation (Langfitt, Kassel, 1968; Meyer et al., 1969), and occasionally lesion (Molnar, Seylaz, 1965) of rather extensive areas in the reticular formation might modify cerebral blood flow. Reis et al. (1979, 1982) for years studied the effect of stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nuclei and the region of the dorsal medullary reticular formation and found a prominent increase in CBF. This was conditioned by two different mechanisms: in the first place, by direct vasodilatation and secondly, when it was mediated through the enhancement of brain metabolism. Jadecola et al. (1982) obtained similar results also. Estimation of these numerous (but principally important) studies allow the following conclusions to be drawn:
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1. In rabbits and rats, electrical stimulation of two anatomically and functionally varying intracerebral systems (the fastigial nuclei of the cerebellum and the dorsal medullary reticular formation) may considerably increase local CBF. 2. Electrical stimulation of the fastigial nuclei of the cerebellum leads to a twofold increase of global CBF, suppression of autoregulation and in some areas (the hippocampus and the cerebral cortex) resulting in vasodilatation without metabolic changes. 3. Electrical stimulation applied to the dorsal medullary reticular formation induces CBF increase and suppresses autoregulation, but in all brain areas (particularly, in the cortex) CBF increase appears to be strictly correlated with the enhancement of metabolic activity. 4. The obtained CBF changes are mediated through the intrinsic neural systems of the brain. 5. In the brain there are two systems of regulation of its blood supply: one is located in the cerebellum and is capable of effecting vasodilatation and elevation of tissue blood flow without enhancing the metabolic activity. The other is localized in the dorsal medullary reticular formation and it may be considered as a secondary vasodilatatory system, effecting control of the level of metabolism in the brain (Reis et al., 1982). All these inferences have an essential significance in formulating the theory of regulation of blood supply to the brain. They were derived from the experiments where either destruction of the indicated brain structures or their electrical stimulation were applied. It is clear that it is difficult to predict the consequences of using destroyed structures. Because of shifts that arise in the metabolism of the entire brain itself, application of electrical stimulation of the reticular formation is also inadequate. In the present study, we have attempted to revise the idea of existence of the intracerebral center for CBF regulation with the help of the least invasive method, i.e. the use of local, directed microwave radiation. The respective experiments on rabbits were performed at the Department of Radiation Medicine of Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo, N.Y. and in the Valley Cancer Institute - Los Angeles, California, USA.
10.1. EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL STUDY OF MICROWAVE RADIATION At the end of XX century, due to increasing ecological significance of radiation of nonionizing nature, a large number of investigations emerged dealing with the assessment of clinical and experimental data concerning the biological effects of electromagnetic waves, in particular, those in the radiofrequency range (Presman, 1969, Guy et al., 1974; Michaelson, 1975; Baranski, Crzerski, 1976; Kholodov, Shishlo, 1979; Antipov et al., 1980). The biologically most active is considered the microwave range of electromagnetic radiation that takes a marginal state between radiowaves proper and the optic part of coherent light waves (Antipov et al., 1980).
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The mechanism of the interactions of electromagnetic waves and biological objects is the subject of special attention and we shall not deal with this topic now, but will point out only that the most commonly accepted mechanism is considered oscillation of free ions and rotation of dipole molecule with a frequency of the applied electromagnetic field. In this section, we will briefly look at the effects of this interaction and their employment in experimental and clinical studies. The majority of studies on the evaluation of the effect of microwave radiation were done on the central nervous and cardio-vascular systems. Severe changes in the vegetative nervous system and pronounced modulation of electrical activity of the brain were displayed (Bychkov, 1962; Ginzberg, Sadchikova, 1964; Tyagin, 1965). Many investigators believe that alteration in function of the nervous system with predominance of viscero-vegetative shifts and diencephalic syndromes testify both to direct and mediated influences of microwaves on the CNS (Antipov it al., 1980). In experiments on rats Lobanova (1964), has shown disturbance in the positive conditioned reflexes induced by microwave radiation. In rats an increase (after the first exposure of radiation) and then a decrease of excitability were noted (Minecki it al,. 1962). In the monograph of Antipov et al., (1980), he represents generalized data concerning the action of superhigh frequency (SHF) factor on the higher nervous activity, which vividly indicates a rather wide variability and polymorphic character of functional changes.. In the electrical activity of the cerebral cortex, the following changes were noted: the enhancement of synchronization; a long-term desynchronization; a short-term desynchronization; generation of epileptic discharges (Kholodov, 1966; Gordon, 1966; Presman, 1968; Baranki, Czerski, 1976). However, some investigators cast doubts on the correctness of having used of the EEG method while studying the biological effects of microwaves (Antipov et al,. 1980) in view of the considerable distortion of the electromagnetic field and interference with an objective evaluation of changes in the electrical activity of the cerebral cortex. The influence of microwaves in the blood forming systems and blood has been subjected to an intense study. Despite contradictions in data, one still may conclude that chronic radiation affects the blood system in a definite way and primarily the manifesting effect is the instability of its indices. As is known, microwave radiation has been widely applied in clinics; in particular, its thermal effect has been used to induce hyperthermia. Hyperthermia is successfully applied in the treatment of malignant tumours of various genesis. Data of Cavaliere et al., (1967), indicating selective thermosensitivity of tumour cells (compared to normal ones) within 4245oC temperature range, served as the point of departure for the commencement of intensive studies in this direction. Studying thermosensitivity of normal and tumor tissue, Giovanilla et al. (1973) have demonstrated that 95% of tumor cells in culture perish after a 2-hr heating to 42.5oC. The mere substantiation of the therapeutic effect of hyperthermia in oncological clinics, even with no essential study of the mechanism of this effect, served as a powerful impetus for development of methods and means for local induction of heat directly in tumor tissue. This time the main problem was how to deliver, or to be more precise, focussing the warming-up
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for required energy namely tumor tissue, especially if the latter was localized deep in the patient's body. In a critical survey of technical methods and means for the induction of local hyperthermia, Storm and Morton (1983) consider the application of microwave technique as the most efficient and perspective one. A large number of specially designed waveguides can readily deliver microwave energy to the affected tumor region of the body. Using a waveguide of the construction of Sandhu et al. (1978) for 2450 MHz frequency microwaves, we did experimental and clinical studies looking at the dynamics of oxygenation and microcirculation in tumor tissue under conditions of microwave hyperthermia (Bicher et al., 1980a,b; 1983; Bicher, Mitagvaria, 1981). When the temperature reaches 43oC an abrupt disturbance of microcirculation and impairment of oxygenation appeared to occur in tumor tissue, this, in our opinion, must promotes death to the tumor cells. In his earlier study Bicher (1978) demonstrated that microwave radiation (2450 MHz) of the rabbit brain leads to disturbances of autoregulation of the oxygen supply to nerve tissue. The disturbance occurs shortly after the development of local hyperthermia. The mechanism of this phenomenon, in particular, as to whether it is hyperthermia-dependent or merely develops in parallel with it, remains uncertain. However, the given study served as a basis for us to study the effect of local microwave radiation of the brain on the regulation of its blood supply.
10.2. DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE REGULATION OF LCBF DURING LOCAL MICROWAVE RADIATION OF THE BRAIN Experiments were performed on rabbits using a generator of microwaves with 2450 MHz frequency. Various regions of the cerebral cortex were subjected to radiation exposure with a concomitant measurement of the intensity of local blood flow (or a conventional hydrogen clearance and electrochemical generation of hydrogen), oxygen tension (microelectrodes of the "gold in glass" type (Carter et al., 1959) and temperature (brass-tungstem thermocouples). In addition, through one of the femoral arteries systemic arterial presuure (SAP) was measured. All the parameters were registered on a poligraph of the firm "Grass" (USA). An experiment on microwave radiation of the rabbit brain is schematized in Figure 53. Control of the regimen of a microwave generator based on express-analysis of data was implemented on a computer system of "Apple-II' type. As a waveguide-applicator of microwaves we have used an applicator of the construction of Sandhu et al. (1978), having in the transverse section sizes 5.5.cm and cylindrical antennas (10 cm long and 3 mm in diameter).
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Figure 53. A general view of experiment with microwave radiation of the rabbit brain.
Applicators were installed at the distance of 0.5-1 cm from the irradiated site, being oriented in such a way that force lines of the field were strictly perpendicular to the electrodes employed, otherwise there arose artefacts and registration of the parameters was rendered impossible. Animals were anesthetized by chloropromazine (50 mg/kg) in combination with ketamine (40 mg/kg) immobilized by flaxedyl and maintained on artificial ventilation. The first series of experiments was run by the scheme presented in Figure 54 that is the electrodes for measuring PO2 and temperature were localized on the side of irradiated hemisphere, while those for lCBF measurement, on the contralateral side.
Figure 54. A scheme of the location of a microwave applicator (MW) and electrodes during the measurement of local blood flow in the contralateral hemisphere.
Typical dynamics of PO2 and lCBF obtained in the course of microwave radiation at this disposition of electrodes and applicator is given in Figure 55. A time counter is set simultaneously with the onset of radiation exposure and is set off with its termination (large points are equal to 1 min).
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In another series of experiments the electrodes were localized in the hemisphere to be irradiated (Figure 56), but the electrode for lCBF measurement was installed at various distances from the applicator. Figure 57 presents a scheme of disposition of the electrodes and applicator of microwaves (the trepanation hole is drown by an oval. The mean distance between the sites of lCBF measurement was 5-8 mm. The results obtained with the use of the scheme given in Figure 57a are presented in Figure 58. Sequence of reactions to irradiation in this case is such: rises temperature (simultaneously with the switching on the generator), then with about 1 min latency increases PO2 and with larger latency, starts a sharp increase lCBF.
Figure 55. Dynamics of the registered parameters during microwave radiation according to the scheme presented in Figure 54.Scale of PO2 values in mm Hg; time counter indicates duration of microwave (MW) radiation, large gradations correspond to one minute.
Figure 56. A scheme of the location of electrodes and microwave applicator for registration of parameters in the hemisphere to be irradiated. Microwave applicator (1); reference electrodes (2,5,7); the site of temperature measurement (3); the site of oxygen tension measurement (8); the site of lCBF measurement (4,6,9).
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When scheme "b" is employed (Figure 57b) there occurs a preliminary fall in lCBF followed by its sharp elevation (Figure 59a,b). And finally at the point the most remote from the applicator (Figure 57c) in the course of learning lCBF decreases and its recovery occurs only after the withdrawal of the influence (Figure 60a,b,c).
Figure 57. Versions of the locations of electrodes and MW in the experiment according the scheme presented in Figure 56. TO - trepanation opening.
Figure 58. Dynamics of recorded parameters during microwave exposure according to the scheme given in Figure 57a. Designations the same as in the previous figures.
A repetitive irradiation (with 5-10 min intervals) develops stable hyperemia (Figure 61), which cannot be removed by switching off the generator of microwaves. In all cases, there is sharp enhancement of oxygenation of nerve tissue and rise in its temperature variation depends on the density of the microwave power used.
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In the third series of experiments a zone of the medulla oblongata is subjected to local irradiation. As distinct from the previous series, in this case lCBF and PO2 appeared to be increased in the frontal area of the cerebral cortex without any marked changes in the temperature in these areas (Figure 62). Measurement of temperature in the site of exposure usually shows its rise by 2-3 points above the initial value.
Figure 59. Dynamics of recorded parameters during microwave radiation according to the scheme given in Figure 57b.
Figure 60. Dynamics of recorded parameters during microwave radiation according to the scheme presented in Figure 57c.
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Figure 61. Long-term increase of CBF level observed after repetitive microwave irradiation exposure. Designations the same as in the previous figures.
Figure 62. Dynamics of recorded parameters during microwave radiation of a site in the medulla oblongata and cerebellum.
Statistical evaluation of changes in the parameters registered in all series of experiments has shown that they are highly reliable (P<0.01). Quantitative processing of data on the measurement of local blood flow (done by the method of hydrogen clearance) and oxygen tension has revealed that upon irradiation of a zone on the medulla oblongata lCBF enhances in an average by 250%, while PO2 increase up to 130% of the initial level. Analysis of the first two series of experiments with local irradiation of the cerebral cortex when the measuring electrode of lCBF is localized on the ipsilateral cortex, indicate that the reactions observed would be due only to the thermal effect of microwaves. This can be verified by the pattern of lCBF changes as being dependent on the remoteness of the zone of measurement from the applicator. As seen from the presented figures, as the applicator is approached, the initial fall in lCBF (on the ipsilateral side) becomes less significant and in the points of maximal approachment lCBF increases without any preliminary decrease. In view
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of the fact that irradiation has a local character, thermal hyperemia in the site of tissue heating may lead to a decrease of tissue blood flow in the surrounding area, and as heat is further spread, the initial decrease is gradually replaced by an increase in lCBF, extending farther the area of decreased blood flow. Thus, it may be suggested that during irradiation of the cerebral cortex there occurs a local redistribution of local blood flow, that is, the phenomenon similar to the well known "Robin Hood's syndrome" (Lassen, 1968). As an additional support to what has been said serves the lack of any changes in lCBF in the contralateral hemisphere. The third series of experiments with irradiation of the site in the medulla oblongata has clearly shown that microwaves may exert a powerful influence on the level of blood flow in all areas of the cerebral cortex, without any temperature variation in them. Here it is reasonable to suppose that blood flow reaches its maximal level, since anoxia induced under these conditions by respiration of pure nitrogen (see Figure 63), despite an increase in SAP and decrease in PO2, does not lead to any variation of the elevated lCBF. Bearing in mind that the latency of the described total increase in lCBF does not exceed several seconds and there is no increase in temperature in the site of lCBF measurement, perhaps there are no grounds to think that the metabolic activity enhances. The totality of the vasodilatatory responses must have a neurogenic character and should be due to the exposure of microwaves namely in the area of the medulla oblongata (in as much similar exposure on the cortex led only to local thermal hyperemia).
Figure 63. Effect of anoxia in the course of microwave radiation of the site in the medulla oblongata and cerebellum.
Thus, in contrast to the investigations (Langfitt, Kassel, 1968; Molnar, Seylaz, 1965; Meyer et al., 1969; Reis et al., 1982, where the authors employed electrical stimulation or lesion of the cerebellar fastigial nuclei and the dorsal medullary reticular formation (what in one case led to a sharp enhancement of the metabolic activity, and in the other to a significant trauma), we have succeeded in obtaining, (perhaps in a "purer" form) the effect of vasodilatation of cerebral vessels, described by the above authors. What is more, our experiments enable to affirm with more certainty namely a neurogenic character of the vessel
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vasodilatation (as maximally plausible). Although, we have to stimulate also, that site of exposure in our case is less localized and it might embrace both the cerebellum and the medulla oblongata (the depth of penetration of microwaves reaches 3 cm) and we therefore are deprived of the possibility to differentiate the role of indicated structures in the observed effect. However, as been already pointed out, the method used by us is minimally invasive and permits to differentiate the secondary metabolic effect from the primary neurogenic. The microwave induced thermal energy ought to be considered, in our case, as a factor interfering with the functioning of the neurogenic center. Besides mentioned hyperthermic exposure of the brain tissue might have direct thermal effect on cerebral vessels and tissue and below we discuss some possible aspects of such an effect.
Chapter XI
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN CEREBRAL TISSUE, CAUSED BY HYPERTHERMIA-INDUCED THROMBOSIS OF THE CEREBRAL VESSELS 11.1. THE PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF HYPERTHERMIA TREATMENT Method of hyperthermia is based on fact that with rise in temperature all vital functions accelerate. This global rule was discovered in the end of XVIII by famous Dutch scientists Svante Arrhenius and Jacobus Henricus Van’t Goff. Thanks to their research, already from the school lessons we learn that rise in temperature per 10 degrees centigrade half fastens the chemical reactions. As for the metabolic processes in living organism, their rate can be increased ten times more. Most important area of hyperthermia method application is the treatment of oncologic diseases. The point is that heating of the organism to 43-43,50С has a direct cytocidal effect on tumor cells; however, the mechanism of high temperature effect as such is not completely figured out yet. It is supposed that simultaneously several factors are crucial for the final impact: thermal damage of cells, delay of their division and triggering of the apoptosis. It turned out that tumor cells are heating up much stronger than healthy cells; therefore they die sooner. The main goal of local hyperthermia treatment is affecting tumour tissue causing apoptosis or necrosis depending on the level of temperature and duration of hyperthermic exposure. It turned out that in tumour tissue most pronounced apoptosis is observed at prolonged hyperthermia exposure (Toyota et al, 1998). But comparison of results of longlasting (6 hours) low temperature (400C) hyperthermia in combination with chemotherapy, with short-term, high temperature hyperthermia, most pronounced apoptosis in tumour tissue has been revealed using the high temperature short term heating (Toyota et al, 1998). At the same time has been established, that an acidic environment (pH=6,6) enhanced the
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hyperthermia-induced apoptosis in HL-60 human promyelocytic leukemia cells as judged by the DNA fragmentation, flow cytometric analysis of DNA content, and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (Takasu et al., 1998). Hyperhermia exerted no effect on the expression of Bcl-2 and Bax, regardless of the environmental acidity during heating. The time of increase in apoptosis after heating coincided with the time of decrease in the G1phase cell population. The authors believe that the increase in heat-induced apoptosis in HL60 cells in an acidic environment was due to a direct increase in the proteolitic cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase by acidic caspases without the involvement of Bcl- and Bax, and that heat-induced apoptosis occurred during G1 phase in HL-60 cells (Takasu et al., 1998) Recently the interest towards hyperthermia has been significantly increased thanks to the thorough critical analysis of the results and several randomized studies that demonstrated the considerable increase of treatment effectiveness after the incorporation of hyperthermia into the medical schedule, provided that there was sufficient temperature-exposure of tumor during the hyperthermia procedure (Van Der Zee, 2002). It is ascertained that hyperthermia alone has the anti-cancer effect only in 12-13% of cases (Mardynski et al., 2001) while in combination with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy the effectiveness of treatment substantially increases. But potentialities of hyperthermia are even broader. It is proved that hyperthermia is fatal not only towards the tumor cells, but also towards bacteria and viruses. In 1996 it was announced that hyperthermia is effective towards HIV as well. Finally, there was information about application of hyperthermia for elimination of physical drug addiction (Fradkin, 2003). But let’s revert to the oncology problems. The principal reason for inclusion of artificial hyperthermia into the multi-component treatment of oncologic patients is that it takes in account those morphofunctional peculiarities of tumors that distinguish them from homologous normal tissues by number of rather important and correlated parameters: insufficiency of blood supply, especially on the level of microcirculation; degree of oxygenation; capacity of glycolysis; levels of pH (Yarmonenko, 1987). Through the application of strictly dosed regimen of hyperthermia and hyperglycemia, it becomes possible to manage above mentioned morpho-functional parameters of tumorous and normal tissues. This leads to the expansion of therapeutic range and, ultimately, to the practical realization of the concept of selective enhancement of tumor sensitivity towards radiation and medication. As a result of decreased volume blood flow (especially in hypoxic areas), tumors may overheat at least 1-20С higher than surrounding normal tissues; at that, their thermal damage and effect of consequent exposure to radiation are also amplified Konopljannikov, (1991). High effectiveness of hyperthermia, as adjuvant of radiotherapy, is caused by following circumstances: 1. Hyperthermia has damaging action on cellular level, at that, this effect depends on temperature value and duration of heating; from this it follows that exposure to hyperthermia should be located in tumor area (as well as for the cases of application of ionizing radiation);
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2. In contrast to ionizing radiation, reduction of oxygen concentration in tissues during exposure to hyperthermia does not lead to weakening of damaging action. Therefore, hyperthermia allows overcoming radio resistance of hypoxic tumor cells. 3. During hyperthermia damaging action’s correlation with cell cycle stage is different from what is typical for ionizing radiation. Thus, the highest resistance is typical for S-period, while during the heating the most sensitive is the period of DNA synthesis. That’s why the hyperthermia comes forward as the “ideal” adjuvant, which is smoothening tumor cells’ survival rate fluctuations subject to the cell cycle stage, in which exposure took place. 4. Usually, tumor cells’ thermo sensitivity is similar to that of cells in surrounding normal tissues, but because of number of physiological peculiarities, such as low blood flow, more acid medium as a whole, critically low pH in hypoxic areas and insufficient maintenance, they are damaged much heavier than normal ones; 5. Together with damaging action, hyperthermia is characterized by significant radiosensitizing effect caused by the temporary disturbance of repair processes; this leads to substantial increase of cellular radio sensitivity, which is also in correlation with temperature, duration of heating and time interval between heating and radiation; 6. Apart from biological effects emerging on a cellular level, hyperthermia evokes change of the blood flow in heated area; this effect has dynamic character and correlates with heating in a complex way. According to Kelleher D.K. and Vaupel P.W. (1995), exposure to hyperthermia evokes complex pathophysiological processes in tumor tissues: changes in blood flow, oxygenation, metabolic and energy status. At that, human tumors are characterized by the apparent heterogeneity of blood flow, changes of which during heating are unpredictable and depend on spatial arrangement and time. In some cases, increase of the blood flow may result it increased heat diffusion, thus stipulating unattainability of therapeutic temperature values. Thus, the rise in temperature of tissue during heating is largely dependent on the influx of heat from the external heat source and also on the efflux of heat through dissipation by the circulating blood (Guy, Chou, 1980; Song, 1982; 1984). Therefore, preferential heating and damage of tumor can be expected only if heat is preferentially delivered to the tumor or if heat dissipation by blood flow is slower in the tumors than in surrounding normal tissues. Phenomenon of induced thermal tolerance is essential for application of hyperthermia in thermo-radiation therapy. Thermotolerance is a nonheritable resistance to hyperthermia induced by exposure to heat and other cytotoxic agents. It develops within 2-3 hours during exposure to temperatures less than 430C (Engin, 1994). Cells exposed for a brief period to temperatures higher than 430C are sensitized to exposure to temperatures below 430C, and it was called “stepdown heating, SDH” (Engin, 1994). SDH results from the inhibition of thermotolerance development by exposure to the high temperature. Cells are sensitized to hyperthermia damage by acutely lowering pH, and thermotolerance development is reduced at low pH. Reduced pH also enhances thermoradiosensitization. Since much of tumor population is at low pH, and these tumor cells are very likely to be hypoxic and radio- and chemoresistant, this offers one of the strongest reasons for combining hyperthermia with
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radio- or chemotherapy in the treatment of human tumors (Bicher et al., 1980; 1983; 1986; Engin, 1994; Van der Zee, 2002). Thermotolerance was discovered during the study of thermal damages’ repair through fractional exposure, similar to how the repair of sublethal ionizing radiation damage is studied. It was found that splitting of single hyperthermal exposure (of cells or tissues) into two fractions is slackening their cumulative effect, while the extension of interval between fractions results in increasingly more reparation of induced thermal damages. Half-period of recovery from sublethal thermal damages for many cells of mammals in vitro and in vivo is about three hours. After 12-24 hours after first heating, and following the full repair of sublethal thermal damages, increased resistance to heat (so called induced thermal tolerance) develops; when the thermal tolerance reaches its maximum value, sensitivity towards hyperthermia decreases 2-4 times and more, which equals to 1-20С decrease of “effective” heat doze. As a matter of fact, thermotolerance is a biological response which enables organisms to survive sub-lethal high temperatures prior to experiencing a non-lethal heat exposure (King et al., 2002; Field, Bleehen, 1982). Many studies have demonstrated this phenomenon in cultured cells and animals other than mammals (Mizzen, Welch, 1988; Kampinga, 1993; Theodorakis et al., 1999). Limited studies in rodents have revealed that a marked whole-body hyperthermia preconditioning (Kapp, Lord, 1983; Li., et al., 1983; Weshler et al., 1984). The molecular mechanism of mammalian whole-body hyperthermia, however, has not been investigated in detail (King et al., 2002). Maximum induced tolerance after the first low-damage exposure to hyperthermia (430С, 30 minutes) is observed during 24-48 hours; its intensity and manifestation in time depends on heat dose, which has caused the thermal tolerance. It is illustrated that while transition from weaker to stronger “doses of heat” within the non-damaging range, the value of maximum thermo-tolerance increases, but then, together with further increase of heating dose and transition to the damaging doses, the value of maximum thermo-tolerance starts to decrease. Thus, there exists certain optimal value of “heat dose”, at which the maximum value of induced thermal tolerance develops. In order to ignore in treatment regimen the additional effect of tumor thermo-tolerance induced by the previous fraction, it is recommended to carry out the hyperthermia sessions no more than 1-2 times per week; in this way there will be sufficient time interval between hyperthermia fractions, during which above mentioned effect could be fully eliminated. From the other hand, it is experimentally fixed that during the therapeutic heating, i.e. at the temperature value more than 420С, thermotolerance in tissues, including tumor ones, does not develop. This circumstance allows selecting any regimens of tumors’ thermoradiation therapy, without fearing development of thermotolerance. Besides, it is established, that an acidic and nutritionally deprived environment greatly increases the thermosensitivity of tissue, inhibits the recovery of tissue from thermal damage, and inhibits the development of thermotolerance (Gerweck, 1977; Goldin Leeper, 1981; Overgaard, 1976; Overgaard, Nielsen, 1980). In 1998 Jyh-Cherng Lin and Chang W. Song have studied the influence of vascular thermotolerance on the heat-induced changes in blood flow, pO2, and cell survival in tumors.
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Vascular thermotolerance in SCK tumors of A/J mice was studied by comparing the changes in blood flow, as measured by the 86Rb uptake method, from a single heating with those from two heatings. Authors considered that the heat-induced decline in 86Rb uptake on tumors could be substantially inhibited when the tumors were preheated, indicating the development of vascular thermotolerance. In SCK tumors, the vascular thermotolerance peaked 5 or 18 h after the tumors were heated for 1h at 41,50C or 42,50C, respectively. Consequently, the tumor blood flow decreased by 50% in 81 min when the tumors were heated at 43,50C without preheating, whereas the tumor blood flow decreased by 50% in 195 min at 43,50C when the tumors were preheated 18 h earlier at 42,50C for 1 h. The influence of vascular thermotolerance on the heat-induced changes in intratumor pO2 was also investigated. The average intratumor pO2 was 8,9 mm Hg before heating. Heating at 43,50C or 44,50C for 1 h dramatically decreased the intratumor pO2 to 3,0 or 1,2 mm Hg respectively. However the intratumor pO2 decreased to 6,6 or 3,8 mm Hg when the tumors were heated at 43,50C or 44,50C respectively, 18 h after preheating at 42,50C for 1 h. Heating the tumors vasculatures were at peak thermotolerance relatively ineffective in suppressing tumor growth. These data demonstrate that vascular thermotolerance in tumors may exert profound effects on tumor response to multiple heating in clinical hyperthermia (Lin, Song, 1993). Oxygenation of tumor shows tendency towards reflection of the changes in the blood flow during the hyperthermia and may increase after the heating. This is equally peculiar both for experimental and for human tumors, at least for mild hyperthermia. Substantial changes in glucose concentration in tumors during the hyperthermia are noted; these changes are apparently conditioned by changes in blood flow and development of interstitial edema. During hyperthermia the amount of lactate increases as a result of glycolisis’ activation. One of the most pronounced physiological change in tumors by heat is a prompt decrease in intratumor pH with following recovery against the “thermal dose”. Decrease in intratumor pH would accentuate the thermokilling of tumor cells and possibly inhibit repair of thermodamage and development of thermotolerance in tumors (Emami, Song, 1984). Thus, it is supposed that the differential effects of heat on vascular function and pH in tumors and normal tissues may result in a greater damage in tumors than in surrounding normal tissues. The mechanism of the decrease in blood flow and pH in the heated tumors completely is not clear, but these two phenomena seem closely related (Song, 1982). At the same time, it is known that bioenergy status of tumor worsens during hyperthermia, which is proved by decreased concentration of ATP and phosphocreatinine and increased content of nonorganic phosphate. Hydrolysis of ATP results in accumulation of purine catabolites of hypoxanthine, xanthine and uric acid with formation of hydrogen ions that promote heating-produced acidosis. Local hyperthermia therapy for cancer can produce selective heating of solid tumors on the basis of known physical laws. If energy is deposited in the general region of the tumor, temperature tends to develop in the tumor higher than that in surrounding normal tissues (Babbs, DeWitt, 1981). The main goal of hyperthermia therapy is to achieve cytotoxic temperature elevations in the tumor for an adequate period of time, without damaging nearby normal tissue. It is well known fact that heat induces a prompt increase in blood flow accompanied by dilation of vessels and increase in permeability of the vascular wall (Song, 1984; Song et al., 1980). The
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mentioned authors have shown that the degree of pathophysiological changes in the vascular system in normal tissue is, of course, dependent on temperature and duration of heating, and an excess exposure of tissues to heat results in a breakdown of vasculature followed by necrosis of the tissue. Usually the blood flow in normal tissues increases remarkably when heated temperature commonly used in hyperthermia is in range of 42-450C. The fact emerging from various experimental data is that the heat-induced change in the blood flow in tumors is considerably different from that in normal tissues. In accordance with data obtained by Song (1982) the blood flow in tumor appears to increase slightly when heated at temperatures below 41-420C, but drastically decreases at temperatures above 420C. It is necessary to underline, that hyperthermia at therapeutic temperature (430-450C) causes a profound increase in blood flow in normal tissues in experimental animal systems, while it induces, as has been mentioned, only meager and temporal increases in blood flow in tumors. A severe vascular occlusion and hemorrhage usually follows the increase in blood flow in the tumors at the above temperatures (Emami, Song, 1984). Due to the vascular occlusion, the dissipation of heat in the tumor becomes inefficient, and the temperatures in the tumor rise higher than those in normal tissues during hyperthermia at temperature above 420C (Song, 1982). While the majority of experimental study shows a decrease and even a lapse in blood flow within microcirculation during or after hyperthermia, the data on human tumors are less conclusive. Some of the investigators do not find a decrease in circulation, while others do (Reinhold, Endrich, 1986). These authors consider that this is an important field of investigation in the clinical application for hyperthermia because a shut down of the circulation would not only facilitate tumor heating (by reducing venous outflow, and reducing the heat clearance from the tumor), but would also facilitate tumor cell destruction. More over, the same holds for alterations that occur subsequently to the circulatory changes, like a heat-induced decrease of tissue pO2 and pH (Reinhold, Endrich, 1986). In hyperthermic tumor therapy a number of complex processes and interactions take place which deal with the heat-induced changes in the micro-physiology of tumors and normal tissues which may not only enhance the exponential cell kill, but which may also culminate in vascular collapse with ensuing necrosis of the tumor tissue in the areas affected (Reinhold, Endrich, 1986). The speed and degree of vascular collapse is dependent on heating time, temperature and tumor model used. Such vascular collapse generally occurs at temperatures that cause a substantial blood flow increase in certain normal tissues, thus preferential antitumor effects can be achieved (Horsman, 2006). The tumor vascular supply can also be exploited to improve the response to heat. Decreasing blood flow, using transient physiological modifiers or longer acting vascular disrupting agents prior to the initiation of heating, can both increase the accumulation of physical heat in tumor, as well as increase heat sensitivity by changing the tumor micro-environmental parameters, primarily an increase in tumor acidity. Such changes are generally not seen in normal tissues, thus resulting in a therapeutic benefit (Hosman, 2006). Microcirculation is a very sensitive process. Under hyperthermia and artificial tissue acidification, blood flow ceased regularly and reproducibly. This blood flow inhibition imposes seemingly as a consequence of a progressing decrease of blood fluidity (von Ardenne, Retnauer, 1985) or in other words, changes in blood rheological properties.
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11.2. THE ROLE OF LOCAL BLOOD FLOW INTENSITY, BLOOD RHEOLOGICAL PROPERTIES AND FREE RADICALS IN DEVELOPMENT OF LOCAL HYPERTHERMIA-INDUCED MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN CEREBRAL TISSUE The clinical use of hyperthermia for cancer treatment was increasingly accepted during past decades and today there is well established fact that the hyperthermia pre-treatment at temperatures between 40-440C enhances the therapeutic effect of radiotherapy or chemotherapy (Van der Zee, 2002). In this temperature range due to the difference in characteristics of normal and tumor tissue, tumor cell killing is achieved. Most biological tissues, with the exception of the central nervous tissue, are tolerant to hyperthermia treatment and can survive at a temperature of up to 440C (Fajardo, 1984). In regard to central nervous tissue, there are some discrepancies in published data concerning irreversible damages that were found after treatment: at 42-42.50C (Sminia et al, 1994), at 43.10C (elSabban, Fahim, 1995) at 43.90C and greater (Fike et al., 1991). And, what is more, Matsumi et al (1994) have showed no obvious irreversible changes in monkeys normal brain tissue at 440C and below in case of non-survival experiment, and just in survival experiment (animals were sacrificed 7 days after the treatment) cerebral areas heated at 440C or above, coagulative necrosis developed, the authors suggesting that the safety limit for brain hyperthermia is 430C for 60 min. Analysis of experimental data received on dogs (Harris et al., 1962; Lyons et al., 1984; Sneed et al., 1986; Fike et al 1991; Eddy et al., 1992; Ikeda et al., 1994), cats (Samaras et al., 1982; Britt et al., 1983; Lyons et al., 1986) and rabbits (Silberman et al., 1982) using different techniques for brain local hyperthermia allowed P. Sminia and M. Hulshof (1998) conclude that maximum tolerable heat dose is 42-42,50C for 40-60 min or 430C for 10-30 min. Effects of hyperthermia were expressed immediately or within a few days after treatment. The most recent review on effect of local hyperthermia on the cerebral nervous tissue was published by J. Haveman et al (2005). It is accepted that hyperthermia-induced damages in central nervous tissue are mostly conditioned by thrombosis and arteriolar constriction (el-Sabban, Fahim, 1995). The microcirculation in its turn in many aspects is conditioned by rheological properties of blood. One of the most significant rheological parameter of blood is its viscosity, which depends on RBC aggregation and deformability, haematocrit, blood temperature and others. If by some reason either haematocrit increased or fibrinogen and immunoglobulin rose, or there is a hypothermic condition, or increased aggregation of erythrocytes or changes in their deformability, or all named factors take place simultaneously, hyperviscosity of blood is observed. Increased viscosity results in a slowing down of blood flow, stagnation of its constituents and in ischemia (Larcan, Stoltz, 1983). Decrease in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and regional cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen were observed in the elderly (66.6+/4.6 years old) with increased blood viscosity as a result of various kind of polycythemia and erythrocytosis (Shikatura, Kubota , Tamura, 1993). Plasma viscosity must also be taken into consideration. Special investigation devoted to clarification of relationship between plasma viscosity and cerebral blood flow (Tomiyama et al., 2000) has shown that rCBF more closely
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follows changes in plasma viscosity rather than whole blood viscosity. Authors believe that plasma viscosity may be the more important factor in controlling cerebral blood flow. In accessible for us literature we did not find any data concerning changes in hyperthermia-induced damages of cerebral tissue under different rheological properties of blood. Besides above-mentioned hyperthermia has a significant influence on cerebral metabolism. The release of excitatory neurotransmitters and oxygen free radicals causes more extensive blood-brain barrier breakdown (Arboix 2005). It has been hypothesized that hyperthermia promotes oxygen-centered free radicals formation in cells. By means of electron paramagnetic resonance spin trapping Flanagan et al. (1998) received direct evidence for free radicals generation during hyperthermia in intact functioning cells. This finding indicate that heat increases the flux of cellular free radicals and support the hypothesis that increased generation of oxygen-centered free radicals and the resultant oxidative stress may mediate in heat-induced cellular damage (Flanagan et al., 1998). Taking into account above-mentioned, we tried to obtain more specific data, pertaining to sensitivity of cerebral tissue to hyperthermia treatment and its immediate effect, manifested by histological changes, and the role of local blood flow, blood rheological properties, and the possible role of free radicals in development of mentioned changes.
Experimental Approach Non-survival experiments were performed on pathology free adult mail Wistar rats weghing 250-300g. Each rat was anesthetized by 0.15ml/100g bdy weight I/P injection of 4% Chloral Hydrate solution. After catheterisation of right femoral vein, animals were mounted in a stereotaxic apparatus. The skull was exposed and about 3 mm hole was drilled in the parietal bone (right or left). The dura mater was carefully retracted, and a thermistor bead probe for thermal clearance method (Xu et al., 1998; Zhu et al., 2005) was dipped into the sensory motor area of the cerebral cortex at a depth of 0.5 mm. In parallel with the temperature probe a silicon tube (0.5 mm internal diameter) connected to a peristaltic pump was lowered to the cerebral surface (Figure 64). After testing the thermistor probe it was connected to the thermistor data acquisition block of polygraph “MX-01" (USSR). The silicon tube, lowered to the brain surface, was connected to the outlet of one-channel peristaltic pump (MMC, Czechoslovakia). The pump’s inlet, via polyethylene catheter, was connected to an ultra-thermostat’s reservoir, filled with artificial cerebrospinal fluid heated up to the temperature necessary for achievement of stable level of temperature on the brain surface (either 37, 41, 43 or 450C). Rectal temperature was measured with a thermocouple probe, connected to the second channel of temperature measuring block of polygraph, and was maintained on 370C by a feedback-controlled infrared lamp.
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Figure 64. Design of Experiment. Temperature of Artificial Cerebrospinal Fluid (ACSF) was maintained by Ultra-thermostat (UT) on 370C (Control Group), 41, 43 and 450C (respectively in the following three series of experiments). Core body temperature (measured rectally) was maintained on 370C by feedback controlled Infrared Lamp. ACSF heated up to desire temperature irrigates rats’ brain surface during 60 minutes by means of peristaltic pump. The temperature on the cerebral surface and thermal clearance was measured by means of thermistor bead probe.
After completion of the surgical procedure and placing the thermistor probe and silicon tubing in the craniotomy location, controlled hyperthermic exposure was applied regionally by irrigating the cerebral surface with cerebrospinal fluid heated in the thermostat reservoir up to the desired temperature. In the first series of experiments, the temperature of the artificial cerebrospinal fluid in normothermic (control) Group 1 of animals (6 rats) was maintained on the level of 370C. In the following three groups (6 animals in each) the temperature of the artificial cerebrospinal fluid correspondingly was 41 (#2 Group), 43 (#3 Group), and 45 (#4 Group) degrees Celsius. In the second series of experiments similar to the first series, 4 groups of animals (#5 – normothermic, #6 – 41, #7 – 43 and #8 – 450C) 15 minutes prior to heating and 15 minutes after its beginning 1ml of 10% high molecular weight Dextran T-500 (Pharmacia, Sweden) was administered i/v. In order to maintain systemic arterial and venous pressure levels close to the normal, the same amount of blood was withdrawn. In the third series of experiments 4 groups of animals (#9 – normothermic, #10 – 41, #11 – 43 and #12 – 450C) 15 minutes prior to heating 0.3 ml/100g body weight 5% solution of Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) – well-known scavenger of free radicals was administered i/v. The composition of the artificial cerebrospinal fluid (in mmolls/L) was the following: NaC1 - 118.0; KCI - 4.7; NaHCO3 -14.9; KH2PO4 - 1.18; MgSO4.7H2O -1.17; CaC12H2O - 2.5; Glucose - 11.0. Permissible changes in pH of this solution were in the range of 7.35 - 7.45. Duration of the brain local hyperthermic exposure in all experimental series was 60 minutes.
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Before the temperature exposure in every animal the baseline local cerebral blood flow (lCBF) was measured three times (with 5 minutes interval). For each temperature grade lCBF was measured before (5-10 minutes after beginning of heating) and after (20-30 minutes after beginning of heating) reaching the steady state level in brain tissue temperature. For recording of “thermal clearance” curve in each measurement, 3 seconds duration heating pulse was delivered to the cerebral cortex tissue and the temperature “clearance” was recorded until to reaching the temperature level prior to heating pulse. After completion of each experimental session, the animal was deeply anesthetized and transcardially perfused with heparinized saline followed by 10% formalin solution. The brain was removed and stored for subsequent histological processing. Serial brain coronal sections 50 μm thick were prepared throughout the extent of hyperthermic lesions, mounted on glass slides and later stained with Azure-Eosin. The area (mm2) of injured tissue and character of histological changes on coronal sections’ was determined under light microscope using an ocular micrometer and the volumes (mm3) were calculated by summing of injured areas of all sections and multiplying by the interval thickness between sections (Kim et al, 1996). The Students’ t-test was used to examine the effect of different temperature exposure on local cerebral blood flow and the geometric dimensions of damaged areas of brain tissue. A value of P<0.05 was considered to be significant.
Normothermic Groups (#1, 5 and 9) Data were analyzed from all series of experiments (18 rats). In each of them visual (macroscopically) and histological examination confirmed the absence of changes to 370C temperature exposure lasting 60 minutes (Figure 65). An average level of local blood flow in cerebral cortex was 61.5±3.2 ml/100g/min.
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I II+III IV V VI
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A
B Figure 65. The absence of changes in sensory-motor cortex of rats’ brain to lasting 60 minutes 370C temperature exposure. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
410C Hyperthermic Groups (#2, 6 and 10) None of the visible alterations and differences from the control has been found during visual examination of the cerebral surface of these groups of animals after completion of a 60-minute hyperthermic (410C) exposure. In the animals from first series of experiments (#2 Group) changes on brain histological slices (Figure 66) were well pronounced. The average area of the lesion was 1.2±0.15mm2 and the average volume of damaged tissue – 36.5 ±7.4 mm3. Individual thrombosed vessels were found mainly in the 2nd and 3rd layers of cerebral cortex and very seldom in 5th and 6th layers. The hyperthermia-induced lesion has semicircle form with clear delineated light outlines in the 2nd and 4th layers. The layered structure of the cerebral cortex is poorly disturbed and neuron disorientation is negligible, although the cell edges are significantly modified.
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B Figure 66. Sensory-motor cortex of the rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (410C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
In this series of experiments hyperplasia and pycnosis of the cells occurred in the 3rd layer of the rats’ cerebral cortex and most of them in pyramidal neurons. In the animals from second series of experiments which before onset of hyperthermia received Dextran T-500 pretreatment (#6 Group) the average area of the lesion were 3.3±0.4mm2 (Figure 67) and the average volume of damaged tissue – 100.3±12.6mm3. Individual thrombosed vessels were found mainly in the II and III layers of cerebral cortex and very seldom in V and VI layers. The layered structure of the cerebral cortex is disturbed mildly and neuron disorientation is negligible, although the cell edges are significantly modified.
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B Figure 67. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dextran T500 pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (410C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
In this series of experiments hyperplasia and pycnosis of the cells occurred in the III layer of the rats’ cerebral cortex and most of them in pyramidal neurons. In the animals from third series of experiments which before onset of hyperthermia received Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreatment (#10 Group) the average area of the lesion were 0.78±0.11mm2 (Figure 68) and the average volume of damaged tissue – 23.4±6.2mm3. The layered structure of the cortex practically is not impaired. The damaged part of the tissue is not surrounded by a penumbra zone and disoriented neurons were not observed. There are some partially pycnotic and hyperplasic neurons in the second and third cortical layers and the density of their distribution is relatively high. The cell’s shape, as well as nucleus and nucleolus are well recognizable.
430C Hyperthermic Groups (#3, 7 and 11) The cerebral cortex surface in locations of 430C hyperthermic exposure similar to the previous groups did not show the color changes or any other macroscopically visible alterations.
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B Figure 68. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (410C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
In #3 group of rats the hyperthermia-induced lesion’s average area in the central coronal sections was 3.54 ± 0.8mm2 and the calculated average volume of the damaged tissue 106.2 ± 11.3mm3. The form of lesion on coronal sections of the brain was modified semicircle (Figure 69A). In the central part of the lesion thrombosed arterioles and capillaries were found and usually located up to the 3rd layer of cerebral cortex. Perivascular accumulation of erythrocytes was rare. The layered structure of the cerebral cortex in the central parts of the hyperthermia – induced lesions was impaired (Figure 69B). In the 3rd layer some pyknotic neurons with difficult recognizable nucleus and nucleolus were observed. In this layer of the cortex neurons were distributed with very high density and loss of neurons was not observed. The 4th layer of the cerebral cortex in this group of animals was the most damaged. The neurons in this layer were hyperplasic and the density of their distribution is very low. The light border between the 4th and 5th layers of the cerebral cortex formed because of heavy neuron loss was easily recognizable on the brain coronal slices. As a result of hyperthermic exposure pyramidal neurons mainly survived in the 4th layer of cerebral cortex. Stellate cells with identifiable soma with outgoing dendrites; nucleus and nucleolus were seldom found.
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B Figure 69. Sensory-motor cortex of rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (430C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
In the 5th layer of cerebral cortex neurons appeared disoriented around the area of lesion. Pycnosis of the neurons in this layer is less pronounced in comparison with the neurons of the 3rd layer but the neurons of this layer are more disoriented. It is very difficult to determine their type. The 6th layer of the cerebral cortex in this series of experiments was showed some medium hyperplastic neurons. In #7 group of Dextran T-500 pretreated animals (Figure 70) the average area of the lesion was 5.9±0.7mm2 and the average volume of damaged tissue – 177.8±16.5mm3. The layered structure of the cerebral cortex in the central parts of the hyperthermia–induced lesions was impaired. In III layer some pycnotic neurons with difficult recognizable nucleus and nucleolus were observed. In this layer of the cortex neurons were distributed with very high density and loss of neurons was not observed. IV layer of the cerebral cortex was significantly damaged. The neurons in this layer are hyperplasic and the density of their distribution is very low. In V layer of cerebral cortex neurons appeared disoriented. In #11 group of DMSO pretreated animals (Figure 71) the average area of the lesion was 1.2±0.13mm2 and the average volume of damaged tissue – 36.1±6.9mm3. In the first and second layers of cerebral cortex some thrombosed arterioles and capillaries were found. The cells in III-V layers are pycnotic (mostly in III layer). The 4-th layer is involved in penumbra zone; here neurons are partially pycnotic and disoriented. As a whole, the layered structure of the cortex is preserved.
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B Figure 70. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dextran T500 pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (430C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
450C Hyperthermic Groups (#4, 8 and 12) After completion of local hyperthermic exposure lasting 60 minutes all animals brain surface of #4 group on the exposed location had a rose color. The same changes in color at a depth of about 2mm were observed on the hyperthermia-damaged brain 50 μm thick coronal sections stained with Azure-Eosin. On the coronal section the hyperthermia-induced lesions look like a modified semicircle with an average area in the central sections equal to 6, 13 ± 0,21mm2 (Figure 72A). The calculated volume of the hyperthermia-induced lesions in brain tissue for this group of rats was 183.6 12.4mm2. In the central part of the hyperthermia lesion numerous thrombosed arterioles and capillaries were revealed, with perivascular accumulation of erythrocytes, mostly they were found up to the 4th cortical layer. In the area of lesion the layered structure of the cortex was significantly impaired and a loss of neurons (including the 4th layer) could be seen (Figure 72B).
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B Figure 71. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (430C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
The damaged (practically burned-out) part of the tissue is surrounded by a wellpronounced penumbra zone with disoriented neurons. The cell’s edges in both focus of lesion and the penumbra area changed forms and identification of the type of cells was difficult. Many of the neurons were swollen although the edge and nucleolus were still distinguishable. Cell lesions in the perifocal, penumbra zone are less defined when compared with those in the central part of the hyperthermic injury in all cortical layers. In #8 group of Dextran T-500 pretreated animals (Figure 73) the average area of the lesion was 10.21±1.3 mm2 and the average volume of damaged tissue – 315.7±26.3 mm3. In the central part of the hyperthermia lesion numerous thrombosed arterioles and capillaries were revealed, with perivascular accumulation of erythrocytes, mostly they were found up to the VII cortical layers. In the area of lesion the layered structure of the cortex was significantly impaired. The damaged part of the tissue is surrounded by a well-pronounced penumbra zone with disoriented neurons. Many of the neurons were swollen although the edge and nucleolus were still distinguishable.
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B Figure 72. Sensory-motor cortex of rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (450C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40;
In #12 group of DMSO pretreated animals (Figure 74) the average area of the lesion was 5.2±0.7 mm2 and the average volume of damaged tissue – 156.5±11.4 mm3. In the damaged area of the cortex thrombosed arterioles and capillaries are sharply defined and they are observed up to 6-th layer. The density of their distribution diminished in lower layers. Heavy neuron loss was easily recognizable on sufficiently great areas of the brain coronal slices. Some hyperplasic cells with changed shape have also been revealed. Statistical data concerning immediate morphometrical changes in cerebral tissue, induced by local hyperthermic exposure for all described experimental conditions are summarized in Table 12 and graphically are presented in Figure 75. Hyperthermia-induced alterations of local cerebral blood flow in normal rats as well as in Dextran T-500 and Dimethyl sulfoxide pretreated rats are summarized in Table 13. Percentages of these alterations in each series of experiments are presented on the figures 7678.
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B Figure 73. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dextran T-500 pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (450C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
The main goal of local hyperthermia treatment is affecting tumor tissue causing apoptosis or necrosis depending on the level of temperature and duration of hyperthermic exposure. It turned out, that in tumor tissue most pronounced apoptosis is observed at prolonged hyperthermia exposure (Toyota et al, 1998). But comparison of results of long-lasting (6 hours) low temperature (400C) hyperthermia in combination with chemotherapy, during procedure of short-term, high temperature hyperthermia most pronounced apoptosis in tumor tissue has been revealed (Toyota et al, 1998). In our early experimental studies of local hyperthermia effects on rabbit’s cerebral tissue, microwave induced local hyperthermia caused remarkable changes in cerebral blood flow manifested by increase of blood flow rates at the beginning of hyperthermia, and slump decreasing of blood flow rates after raising the brain temperature upwards of 430C (Bicher, Mitagvaria, 1980; Mitagvaria, Bicher, 1984).
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B Figure 74. Sensory-motor cortex of the Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats’ brain; 60 minutes hyperthermia (450C); Arrows show the clear-cut edge of damaged tissue. A – magnification: x15; B – framed area from the picture A, magnification: x40.
On the same animal species in conditions of whole body hyperthermia doubling of cerebral blood flow intensity has been observed at the core body temperature 430C; 2.5 times increasing of cerebral blood flow at 440C and 3.5 times increasing at 450C. At the same time augmentation of tissue oxygen partial pressure and pH have been observed (Yamada, 1989). In similar experiments carried out on canine brain (60 minutes duration 420C whole body hyperthermia) microscopically investigation of the brain tissue did not reveal any damaged brain area (Takahashi, et al, 1999). However, under slightly less temperature (41.80C) increase in oxygen transport and consumption in tissue have been revealed (Kerner et al, 1999). During whole body hyperthermia statistically significant increase of oxygen saturation in arterial blood, arterial-venous difference in oxygen partial pressure and the level of venous blood PCO2 were observed. At the same time, decrease of oxygen saturation and pH in venous blood has also been observed (Hall et al, 1999). All these data testify that hyperthermia caused cellular hypoxia in visceral tissue. Hypoxia and decrease of pH has been credited by some authors as causing the anti-tumor effects of hyperthermia (Madden et al, 1990; Van der Zee et al, 1989).
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Whatever the nature of hyperthermia’s positive effect on tumor tissue and increase of its sensitivity to chemo-and radiotherapy, it is very important to ascertain normal tissue safety and the absence of irreversible damage. From this point of view special attention has to be paid to the central nervous tissue thermotolerance and sensitivity for hyperthermia (Sminia et al., 1990; Haveman et al., 2005). As it already has been underlined above, there is a wide discrepancy concerning the temperature sensitivity of brain tissue. Our experiments seem to indicate irreversible damage to brain tissue at temperature close to those clinically used. As we can see (Table 12) all three experimental levels of temperature (excepting the control group) caused different pronounced histological changes in the brain tissue of rats. Depending on temperature, hyperthermic lesions vary from group to group of animals. At 410C we can observe just superficial lesions of the cerebral cortex penetrating 2, and very seldom 3 cerebral layers. Only a few cases of thrombosed cerebral microvessels have been observed in this group of animals. Table 12. Dimensions of 60 minutes hyperthermia-induced brain lesions in Normal, Dextran T-500 and DMSO pretreated rats Dimensions of hyperthermia-induced lesions in Sensory-motor cortex of rats’ brain
41
(1)
43
(2)
45
(3)
1.2 ±0.1 3.5 ±0.8 6.1 ±0.2
(4) (5) (6)
Statistical confidence of difference: (1) vs (2) Signif. at P<0.05 (1) vs (3) Signif. at P<0.01 (2) vs (3) Signif. at P<0.01 (4) vs (5) Signif. at P<0.01 (4) vs (6) Signif. at P<0.01 (5) vs (6) Signif. at P<0.01 (1) vs (7) (1) vs (13) (2) vs (8) (2) vs (14) (3) vs (9) (3) vs (15)
Signif. at P<0.01 Not Significant Not Significant Signif. at P<0.05 Signif. at P<0.05 Not Significant
36.5 ±7.4 106.2 ±11.3 183.6 ±12.4
(7) (8) (9)
(7) vs (8) (7) vs (9) (8) vs (9) (10) vs (11) (10) vs (12) (11) vs (12) (4) vs (10) (4) vs (16) (5) vs (11) (5) vs (17) (6) vs (12) (6) vs (18)
3.3 ±0.4 5.9 ±0.7 10.2 ±1.3
(10) (11) (12)
100.3 ±12.6 177.8 ±16.5 315.7 ±20.3
Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.05 Signif. at P<0.05 Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01 Not Significant Signif. at P<0.05 Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01 Not Significant
Volume of lesion (mm3)
Intra peritoneal injection of 0.3 ml/100g body weight 5% solution of Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) (M±S.E., n=18) Area of lesion (mm2)
Volume of lesion (mm3)
Area of lesion (mm2)
Area of lesion (mm2)
Temperature (0C)
Volume of lesion (mm3)
Normal rats (M±S.E, n=18.)
Intra venous injection of 1ml of 10% high molecular weight Dextran T-500 (M±S.E., n=18)
(13) (14) (15)
0.7 ±0.1 1.2 ±0.1 5.2 ±0.7
(13) vs (14) (13) vs (15) (14) vs (15) (16) vs (17) (16) vs (18) (17) vs (18)
(16) (17) (18)
23.4 ±6.2 36.0 ±6..9 156.2 ±11.4
Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.05 Not Significant Signif. at P<0.01 Signif. at P<0.01
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Table 13. 60 minutes hyperthermia-induced local blood flow changes (ml/100g/min) in cerebral cortex of Normal, Dextran T-500 and Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats Second series (Dextran T-500 pretreated animals) M±S.E.
First Series (normal animals) M±S.E.
Temperature 0 C
Third Series (Dimethyl Sulfoxide pretreated animals) M±S.E.
Time of measurement (after beginning of heating)
(1)
87.1±5.6 (n=6)
(6)
76.2±6.6 (n=6)
(10)
90.3±9.7 (n=6)
5-10 min
(2)
99.9±6.2 (n=6)
(7)
91.7±8.5 (n=6)
(11)
100.5±11.1 (n=6)
20-30 min
(3)
130.6±21.2 (n=6)
(8)
110.1±10.3 (n=6)
(12)
135.3±17.4 (n=6)
5-10 min
(4)
52.7±7.3 (n=6)
(9)
21.2±5.5 (n=6)
(13)
66.5±8.1 (n=6)
20-30 min
(5)
15.4±4.6 (n=6)
Impossible to measure
(14)
26.4±7.6 (n=6)
5-10 min
Impossible to measure
Impossible to measure
Impossible to measure
41
43
45
Statistical confidence of difference: (1) vs (6) Not Significant (3) vs (12) (1) vs (10) Not Significant (4) vs (9) (2) vs (7) Not Significant (4) vs (13) (2) vs (11) Not Significant (5) vs (14) (3) vs (8) Not Significant
20-30 min
Not Significant Significant at P<0.05 Not Significant Not Significant
Volume of lesion [mm 3]
400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 41
43
45 0
Temperature [ C] Normal
Dextran T-500 pretreated
DMSO pretreated
Figure 75. Temperature dependent changes in volume of hyperthermia-induced cerebral lesions in Normal, Dextran T-500 and Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats.
The rise of temperature on 2 degrees of Celsius resulted in very severe lesions of cerebral tissue. Morphological changes are well pronounced and numerous thrombosed vessels are revealed.
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The highest temperature (450C) caused most severe hyperthermic lesion of the cerebral tissue – complete destruction of the layered structure of the cortex in the area of hyperthermic exposure, numerous areas with lost neurons and thrombosed cerebral vessels with perivascular accumulation of erythrocytes were revealed. Hyperthermia-induced local blood flow changes in cerebral cortex of normal rats 250 200 150 lCBF [%]
100 50 0 37 (control)
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43
45 Temperature (0C)
5-10 min and
20-30 min after beginning of heating
Figure 76. Percentage of hyperthermia-induced local blood flow (lCBF) changes in cerebral cortex of normal rats. lCBF was measured on 5-10 and 20-30 minutes after beginning of heating.
Hyperthermia-induced local blood flow changes in cerebral cortex of Dextran T-500 pretreated rats 200 150 lCBF [%] 100 50 0 37 (control)
41
43
45 Temperature (0C)
5-10 min and
20-30 min after beginning of heating
Figure 77. Percentage of hyperthermia-induced local blood flow (lCBF) changes in cerebral cortex of Dextran T-500 pretreated rats. lCBF was measured on 5-10 and 20-30 minutes after beginning of heating.
In accordance with results of our experiments in the first stage of heating up to 430C lCBF sharply increases but later (on 20-30 minutes of heating) it falls down. At the earliest stage of 450C heating the level of lCBF is extremely low and then it stops. This kind of lCBF dynamic is more pronounced in Dextran T-500 pretreated animals. In this case decrease of lCBF on the second stage of 430C heating is sharply defined and in series of experiments with 450C local blood flow in temperature exposed area of cortex is not measurable at all.
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Injection of free radicals scavenger Dimethyl Sulfoxide gives an opposite to Dextran T-500 effect – late stage of 430C and first stage of 450C are slightly better, but in late stage of 450C lCBF still is not measurable. Hyperthermia-induced local blood flow changes in cerebral cortex of DMSO pretreated rats 250 200 150 lCBF [%]
100 50 0 37 (control)
41
43
45 Temperature (0C)
5-10 min and
20-30 min after beginning of heating
Figure 78. Percentage of hyperthermia-induced local blood flow (lCBF) changes in cerebral cortex of Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) pretreated rats. lCBF was measured on 5-10 and 20-30 minutes after beginning of heating.
In normal conditions, the brain tissue temperature depends on local heat production, (a corollary of metabolic activity), rate of cerebral blood flow and the temperature of the blood (Rossi et al, 2001). The effect of local cerebral hyperthermia on responses of pial microvessels of the mouse was investigated by F. El-Sabban and M. Fahim (1995). At the end of 50 minutes hyperthermic exposure (43.10C), arterioles attained a constriction of 37% and thrombus formation was massive enough to occlude fully the microvessels. The same authors during hyperthermia have demonstrated numerous platelets in association with scattered red blood cells and occasional white blood cells in a close proximity but not adhered, to the endothelial wall of hyperthermic brain vessels. The site of platelet aggregation in both venules and arterioles was accompanied by focal endothelial lucency land denudation, vacuole formation, luminal membrane rupture and swelling of the nuclear envelope (Fahim, el-Sabban, 1995). It is known that there is no independent, direct effect of dextran on vascular tone, but high molecular weight dextran can cause erythrocyte aggregation and affect blood flow (Tomiyama, Brian, Todd, 2000). In experimental study Chen et al. (1989) have demonstrated fourfold rising of plasma viscosity while apparent blood viscosity was increased about twofold after administration of high molecular weight dextran (mol wt 500,000, 20% wt/vol). Same authors suggest that dextran-induced hyperviscosity leads to a compensatory vasodilatation in several vital organs (Chen et al., 1989). Erythrocyte aggregation is modified in certain conditions; it tends to occur at the very low shear rates encountered in the venous circulation, where most thrombi occur (Freyburger et al., 1996). As already has been mentioned besides increased aggregability of red blood cells number of other factors can contribute to rise of blood viscosity: increased haematocrit (polycythaemia), increased serum proteins, drop in temperature, impaired erythrocyte
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deformability due to various acquired or inherited disorders of red cell membrane or cytoplasm (Larcan, Stoltz, Gaillard, 1981). Administration of Dextran T-500 (used in our experiments) leads to increase of erythrocyte aggregability index about twofold (Mantskava M., 2003). When erythrocyte aggregation develops, the normal blood flow structuring inside of microvessels becomes inevitably disordered. This disturbs the blood rheological properties and results in a local slow down to a full stop of flow, even though the microvessel lumina and the pressure gradient along their course remain preserved (Mchedlishvili, Maeda, 2001). Erythrocyte aggregation has been shown to affect venous vascular resistance and has been suggested to play a role in determining microcirculatory hemodynamics (Baskurt, Farley, Meiselman, 1997). This phenomenon was found to be associated with different cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipoproteinemia and smoking, miocardial ischemia, thromboembolic states, retinal venous occlusion and others (Hadengue et al., 1998). As already has been mentioned, heat increases the flux of cellular free radicals (Flanagan et al., 1998). It is well known that they are involved in the formation of thrombosis (Hillbom, 1999). Ischemic condition that, as we have seen, develops in the late stage of 430C hyperthermia and in higher temperature also contributes in generation of free radicals and thereby promotes to development of vascular thrombosis. Using of Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) – an antioxidant, a scavenger of free radicals did not gave significant improvement in case of 410C hyperthermia, but in experiments with 43 and 450C notable improvement was observed in both: level of local cerebral blood flow (less pronounced hyperthermic ischemia) and in smaller size of hyperthermia-induced cerebral lesion.
CONCLUSION The scientific material presented on this book allows for some general and specific conclusions as follows: 1. The autoregulation of cerebral blood supply during changes in systemic arterial pressure is dependent on three interacting mechanisms defined as myogenic, neurogenic and metabolic. We believe that these mechanisms are just the separate links of one encompassing regulatory system. It was already mentioned in this book that the discussion between the adherents of different points of views concerning the role of each of these links has been going on over several decades. Now it is going on qualitativly on another level then earlier, and some priority is given to the neuregenic mechanism. This is seems to be due of following: the loops of myogenic and metabolic regulation can be described theoretically as a closed system of some links, while "to close" the loop of neurogenic regulation is hardly possible, despite the availability of numerous methodical procedures of experimental analysis (surgical and pharmacological denervation, electrical stimulation of nerve tranks and brain structures and so on). Logically there arises the question: how much correctly the task is posed and how far correct are approaches used? In previous sections and chapters of this book we tried to give answers on this question, but now let us consider two examples: A). The cerebral vessels are supplied with abundant external and, perheps, internal innervation, but even the most potent influences on this nervous apparatus, as it was described above, do not produce any marked disturbances in the regulation of blood supply to the brain. This became as a reason for some authors questions the existence of a neurogenic link of autoregulation. The source of this incorrect inference was a static character of the overwhelming majority of experimantal data which were used for analytic evaluation. The conventional object of such evaluation are the characteristics of the examined preparation in two stable states: prior and after the impact, while the events occuring in the process of the regulatory reactions proper remain beyond the field of vision of the investigator and we hope that was clearly demonstrated in this book. Thus dynamic analysis of autoregulatory responses indicates that blocade af adrenergic or cholinergic
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Nodar P. Mitagvaria and Hiam I. Bicher innervation of cerebral vessels, as well as narcotization of the animal, having but a little effect on the final result of the regulatory systems compensatory activity, reliably alters the temporal characteristics of the responses (a fast component of autoregulatory reaction is replaced by the slow one, see Figures 79 and 80).
Figure 79. Frequency of manifestation of functioning metabolic, neurogenic and myogenic lincs of cerebral blood flow autoregulation during elevation in systemic arterial pressure under different experimental conditions: WK - wakefullness, NMBTL - nembutal, PHNTL - phentolamine, PHNXB phenoxibenzamine, PRPRN - propranolol, SCPLM - scopolamine.
Figure 80. Same as on Fig.79, but during decrease in systemic arterial pressure.
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This we can consider as a confirmation to the undoubtable involvement of the neoregenic component - at least, of the external innervation of the cerebral vessels - in regulationg the cerebral circulation under the influences of a systemic character. B). The action of sympathetic stimulation, under the normal conditions was shown to be rapidly realized due to the so-called "escape mechanism", however in hypertension this stimulation is rather effective (Marcus M. et al., 1982). Apparantly, a principal mistake is made while analising this phenomenon: electrical stimulation of sympathetic nerves - artificial impact aggrevationg blood supply to the nervous elements of the brain tissue (that is observable at the initial moment of stimulation), is indispensably perceived by a normal system of regulation as irritation subject to compensation. Therefore, a sympathetic vasoconstriction of larger arteries (with more density of innervation) is accompanied by dilatation of the smaller arteries (Busija et a., 1982). That is the electrical stimulation of the sympathetic system leads the CBF out of the homeostatic range, while the system of regulation - exactly its metabolic link returns it to this range. Is not it known that a metabolic stimulus causes far stronger vascular response then even the maximal stimulation of the efferent nerves? Thus, artificial sympathetic stimulation evokes activation of one links in the regulation system "out of place", and this conditions just the natural activation of another link, the initial status ie restored. While under the conditions of hypertension stimulation of the sympathetic trunk evokes a clear-cut reduction of CBF due to which to the neurogenic link has been attributed a role of the of the link protecting the BBB from the disturbances at the ditension of vessels by increased intravascular pressure (Marcus et al., 1982). It seems, however, right to speak that in this case direction of the sympathetic activation coincides with that of other links of the regulation system. Thus, experiments with sympathetic stimulation also prove that the neurogenic mechanism as a link of the system regulationg blood supply to the brain is sufficiently powerful one. 2. In recent years there appeared works dealing with the effect of various intracerebral structures of the CBF regulation: these are the mesencephalic reticular formation, locus correleus, the parabracheal nuclei, the Raphe nuclei, the cerebral fastigial nuclei, thalamus, hypothalamus (Reis et al., 1982). This opens a new chapter in studying the nervous regulation of the CBF devoted to the search of intracerebral innervations of vessels, i.e. internal pathways capable of "closing" the loop of nervous regulation. However, even if such pathways will be found they can by no means close the loop formed by the external innervations. 3. The principle of adecuacy of blood supply to the brain implies the realisation of the coupling "function-metabolism-blood flow" i.e. the regulation of blood supply to individual microregions of nerve tissue in strict quantitative consistence with their metabolism and, consequently with the functional activity. How can external innervation whose source appears to be outside the brain participate in the local self-
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Nodar P. Mitagvaria and Hiam I. Bicher regulation of CBF in terms of the adecuacy principle? In terms of the ideas on the closing the loops of regulation by the principle of feedback connection it should be recognised that yet there is no answer to this question, since no nervous link of the coupling of metabolism (input signal) with blood flow (output signal) is found. However, there is no doubt that there exists also a inverse coupling "blood flowmetabolism-function" and consequently, there is possibility of active regulation under the noraml conditions of input signal, that automatically removes the question of the link of feedback connection. And if the ideas of metabolic self-regulation of local CBF by the principle of adecuacy do not leave the room for the neurogenic link in this process, then it is only the nervous mechanism that is capable of realizing the regulation by the chain "blood-flow-metabolism-function". What are the conditions under which this coupling is to be realized? The process of formation and disturbances of stereotyped reactions in animals and man to environmental stimuli, as it was described above, should be accompanied by the emergence of emotions. Consolidation and formation of a dynamic stereotype of behavior resulted in a decrease of the amplitude of changes in lCBF (see Section 3). The pattern of changes in lCBF recorded in the process of learning appear to be the superposition of two effects: a vegetative components of emotional tension and changes in the metabolic activity. the former in the course of consilidation is dissepears, while latter persistsso that the pronaunceness of the emotional component - especially at the initial stages of learning - may considerably mask the manifest of the functional component. Evaluation of the data reported in this book indicates that when different functional tests are used, changes in the local blood flow in the brain individual structures occur against the background of a virtually unaltered total CBF. Consequently, this changes should be provided by local redistribution of blood flow from the brain areas "less interested" in the performance of the given behavioral act to the "more interested" ones. Moreover, it has been prooved that the redistribution of blood flow occurs to the active vasodilation and vasoconstriction responses in the relevant brain structures, developing concomitantly and in consensus. Pharmacological denervation results in the elimination of the emotopnal component of the changes in local blood flow, but leaves unaltered the functional-metabolic one. And an inference inevitably comes to mind that the former occurs through the neurogenic link of regulation of blood supply to the brain, while the latter through the metabolic one. The emotional component providing an excess of blood flow disrupts the quantitative coupling of the function-metabolism-blood flow. The myogenic mechanism is manifest during fast systemic arterial pressure changes. Its aim is compensation of pressure changes but not to maintain a constant blood flow level in the brain during this pressure changes. 4. There is an homeostatic range of blood flow variations which can satisfy and interact with metabolic demands. However, if the changes in lCBF exceed the limits of the homeostatic range, the regulatory process is triggered. The random distribution of blood flow within the homeostatic range in different brain structures and areas is the cause for the heterogeneity of local responses to generalized vascular disturbance.
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5. The generalized vasodilation that occurs within the brain upon microwave irradiation of the cerebellum and medulla oblongata leads to the assumption that there is a regulatory center for vascular responses, and gives an idea on its possible location. 6. In the dorsal hippocampus and sensorymotor cortex during different stages of the sleep-wakefulness cycle the maximum blood flow increase takes place during emotional wakefulness and REM sleep stages. The minimum level of CBF is accomplished during slow wave sleep. 7. Our results confirmed very high sensitivity of cerebral tissue to hyperthermic exposure even at a temperature of 410C and this finding suggests the need for very quick preventive actions if core body temperature for some reason (during sickness or changes of environmental temperature) is rising above 410C. One of the most significant reasons for extensive damage of nervous tissue under hyperthermic exposure is the formation of micro thrombi and occlusion of cerebral vessels. Stoppage of cerebral blood flow in the zone of vascular occlusion decreases of temperature clearance from the exposed area of the brain and that causes increase in temperature and aggravates the destructive action of hyperthermia. 8. Increased (by any reason) viscosity of blood can slow down blood flow and create favorable conditions for thrombosis especially in venous system but hyperthermic exposure in such cases presumably must hinder thrombogenic activity with simultaneous acceleration of fibrin formation (Pivalizza et al., 1999). 9. Our observations give a good reason to consider cerebrovascular thrombosis as one of the most significant complication of brain hyperthermia. In case of deteriorated blood rheological properties, hyperthermia-induced cerebral lesion is more remarkable. Administration of antioxidants, scavengers of free radicals can partially lessen hyperthermia induced cerebral lesion. In this book, we try to summarize the current knowledge about the mechanisms of local cerebral blood flow regulation and its interaction with cerebral functions, emotions and cognitive activity as well as some critical points of thermotolerance of the brain tissue. This is at the core of human behavior and our understanding of these interactions through future research efforts can only help in our quest for knowledge and the conquest of CNS disease.
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INDEX A abdominal, 9, 11, 14, 35 acceptor, 68 acetylcholine, 23, 29, 33, 190 achievement, 142 acid, 26, 137, 171 acidic, 24, 135, 138, 201 acidification, 140 acidity, 136, 140, 172 acidosis, 13, 25, 67, 72, 139, 180 actin, 205 action potential, 22 activation, 5, 24, 26, 27, 86, 88, 139, 163, 169, 182, 184, 197, 201 active oxygen, 204 activity level, 104 acute, 15, 32, 60, 67, 72, 84, 88, 108, 167, 172, 176, 178, 186, 197, 199, 204 adaptation, 79, 184, 187 adenine, 24, 170 adenosine, 24, 25, 26, 27, 67, 169, 170, 176, 181, 186, 200, 203, 204 administration, 25, 27, 31, 34, 42, 51, 55, 68, 93, 108, 158 ADP, 24, 65, 136 adrenaline, 173 adrenergic neurons, 51 adult, 75, 113, 142 age, 172, 183 agent, 10, 28, 51, 53, 55, 107 agents, 31, 42, 44, 49, 51, 140, 167, 168, 185 aggregation, 141, 158, 159, 169, 174, 184, 193, 201 aging, 180 air, 67, 68, 69, 70, 72, 73
albino, 91, 100, 104, 108, 109 alcohol, 182 alertness, 99 alkalosis, 171 alpha, 2, 30, 32, 49, 55, 109, 175, 184, 189 alters, 88, 95, 162 Alzheimer, 172, 174 amnesia, 108, 109 amplitude, 38, 43, 61, 65, 70, 72, 89, 95, 96, 101, 114, 164 anaerobic, 22, 202 anaesthesia, 11 analog, 3 anastomoses, 3, 181 anatomy, 2, 169 angiogenic, 183 angiotensin, 14, 28, 194 animal studies, 181 animals, 2, 25, 31, 32, 36, 39, 48, 58, 59, 60, 65, 66, 67, 87, 88, 91, 92, 93, 94, 99, 100, 105, 109, 119, 138, 141, 142, 143, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 155, 156, 157, 164, 170, 199 anoxia, v, 69, 70, 73, 75, 76, 77, 84, 111, 132, 167, 176, 183 anoxic, 66 antagonist, 49, 50, 108, 109 antagonists, 34, 168, 175 antenna, 189 anticancer, 175 anti-cancer, 136 anticholinergic, 93, 105, 108 antioxidant, 159 antioxidants, 165, 182 antitumor, 186, 204 anti-tumor, 140, 154 anxiety, 89
Index
208
aorta, 9, 14, 35 apnea, 191 apoptosis, 135, 153, 202 application, 1, 2, 4, 17, 24, 27, 48, 55, 58, 59, 89, 124, 126, 135, 136, 137, 140, 201 arginine, 68 argument, 5, 22 arithmetic, 89 arousal, 112, 116, 117, 169 arterial hypertension, 172 arteries, 2, 3, 11, 12, 14, 17, 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 43, 75, 108, 109, 126, 163, 168, 171, 174, 178, 179, 183, 186, 187, 193, 202, 203, 204 arterioles, 29, 30, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 158, 186, 202, 204 arteriovenous shunt, 196 artery, 3, 10, 25, 27, 28, 30, 50, 72, 109, 169, 171, 173, 181, 182, 189, 198 artificial, 27, 28, 73, 75, 127, 136, 140, 142, 143, 163 asphyxia, v, 9, 72, 73, 75, 76, 77, 78, 184, 200 assessment, 18, 124, 187, 190, 200 assumptions, 111 ATF, 179 ATP, 23, 24, 65, 139, 178, 185 ATPase, 25, 193 atropine, 27, 34, 107, 185 attention, 2, 5, 65, 103, 125, 155 autocorrelation, 113, 114 automation, 22 autonomic, 2, 31 autoradiography, 112 autoregulate, 16 availability, 161, 171 averaging, 15 awareness, 105, 176
B
binding, 3 biochemical, 60, 173, 181 biological, 124, 125, 137, 138, 141, 175, 184 biologically blocks, 107 blood plasma, 28 blood pressure, 9, 11, 21, 24, 39, 172, 177, 178, 179, 181, 187, 201, 204, 205 Blood pressure, 173 blood stream, 10 blood supply, iv, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 12, 14, 23, 29, 30, 32, 34, 44, 50, 51, 57, 79, 83, 85, 86, 108, 109, 123, 124, 126, 136, 161, 163, 164, 192, 197 blood vessels, 16, 18, 23, 28, 38, 39, 40, 41, 51, 172, 173, 190, 191, 195, 198, 203 blood-brain barrier, 25, 31, 32, 49, 142 body temperature, 143, 154, 165 body weight, 143, 155 Bohr, 22, 23, 28, 29, 39, 40, 43, 68, 176, 178, 182, 183, 200, 203 boils, 98 bone, 142 bovine, 28, 195, 200 bradycardia, 14 bradykinin, 23 brain damage, 83 brain functions, 1, 65 brain injury, 11, 182, 190 brain stem, 112, 113, 182, 202 brain structure, v, 3, 5, 66, 84, 88, 91, 102, 104, 109, 111, 112, 113, 118, 123, 124, 161, 164 brain tumor, 172 brainstem, 85, 169, 187, 189, 191 branching, 3 brass, 126 breakdown, 24, 25, 140, 142 breathing, 68, 77, 200 by-products, 24
C bacteria, 136 baroreceptor, 29, 202 barrier, 25, 31, 184, 189, 195 basilar artery, 3 BBB, 163, 184 Bcl-2, 136 behavior, 2, 77, 91, 95, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 106, 164 beta, 2, 30, 32, 51, 53, 172, 189, 198 bicarbonate, 173, 187 bifurcation, 31
Ca++, 27, 186 calcium, 26, 27, 176, 186, 193 caliber, 38 cancer, 6, 124, 139, 141, 169, 173, 177, 179, 180, 186, 188, 194, 196, 197, 200, 201, 203, 204 cancer treatment, 141, 177 capacity, 9, 15, 16, 38, 40, 42, 58, 60, 136, 196 capillary, 3, 12, 67 carbohydrate, 176 carbohydrate metabolism, 176
Index carbon, 176, 181, 186 carbon dioxide, 176, 181, 186 cardiac output, 196 cardiopulmonary, 167, 189, 196 cardiopulmonary bypass, 167, 196 cardiovascular, 101, 159, 185 cardiovascular disease, 185 cardiovascular risk, 159 cardiovascular system, 101 carotid arteries, 3, 11, 27 carotid sinus, 31, 195 carrier, 113 caspases, 136 catecholamines, 187, 198 catheter, 75, 142, 174 cathode, 18, 175 cats, 24, 25, 26, 27, 32, 35, 44, 52, 55, 67, 75, 86, 87, 89, 112, 113, 120, 141, 167, 169, 173, 175, 176, 178, 180, 184, 187, 196, 202, 203 cell, 26, 27, 28, 68, 84, 136, 137, 138, 140, 141, 145, 146, 147, 151, 159, 174, 178, 180, 188, 191, 192, 200, 201 cell cycle, 137, 201 cell killing, 141 centigrade, 135 central nervous system, 88, 181, 199, 200, 201 cerebellum, 30, 112, 124, 131, 132, 133, 165, 189 cerebral arteries, 3, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, 167, 168, 186, 187 cerebral cortex, 1, 2, 16, 26, 35, 38, 43, 50, 52, 54, 55, 56, 66, 75, 77, 83, 84, 86, 87, 96, 97, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 107, 109, 124, 125, 126, 130, 131, 132, 142, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 155, 156, 157, 158, 168, 169, 171, 174, 177, 178, 181, 183, 187, 189,Ű199, 201 cerebral damage, 197 cerebral function, 165, 183 cerebral hemisphere, 30, 92 cerebral hypoxia, 181 cerebral ischemia, 24, 111 cerebral metabolism, 88, 111, 142, 168, 180, 183, 195 cerebrospinal fluid, 25, 142, 143 cerebrovascular, 5, 89, 165, 176, 194, 196, 199, 200 certainty, 60, 132 cervical, 30, 32, 167, 199 channels, 13, 50, 60, 76, 181 charm, 69 chemical, 29, 31, 43, 135, 187 chemical agents, 31
209
chemical composition, 43 chemical reactions, 135 chemoreceptors, 30, 68, 195 chemoresistant, 137 chemotherapy, 135, 136, 138, 141, 153 chiasma, 3 children, 183 cholinergic, 5, 29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 44, 49, 53, 54, 55, 93, 105, 107, 108, 161, 173, 175, 180, 185, 190, 195 cholinergic block, 44, 49, 53, 55 choroid, 176 chronic, 15, 83, 85, 125, 170, 183 circulation, iv, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 21, 29, 30, 32, 33, 38, 43, 51, 59, 65, 86, 92, 109, 111, 113, 123, 140, 158, 163, 167, 173, 174, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 182, 185, 187, 190, 191, 192, 193, 195, 196, 197, 198, 200, 201, 203 classical, 4, 112 classification, 38 classified, 104 cleavage, 136 clinical, 2, 11, 14, 83, 104, 112, 124, 125, 126, 139, 140, 141, 171, 172, 173, 191 clinical trial, 171 clinics, 6, 85, 125 closure, 120 CNS, 88, 125, 165 CO2, 12, 23, 26, 27, 35, 60, 75, 92, 98, 168, 169, 175, 179, 197 coagulation, 188 cognitive, 99, 101, 165 cognitive activity, 165 cognitive map, 99 collateral, 3, 14, 179 communication, 3, 200 compatibility, 23 compensation, 57, 58, 60, 163, 164 complementary, 198 complexity, 2, 195 compliance, 172 components, 22, 40, 44, 46, 47, 48, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 88, 164, 184, 203 composite, 58 composition, 143 compression, 13, 184 computer, 42, 84, 126 concentration, 12, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 65, 67, 137, 139, 173, 176, 193, 199 concrete, 13, 39, 40, 70, 120
Index
210
conduction, 173 confidence, 155, 156 configuration, 91, 92, 94, 95, 101 consciousness, 65 consensus, 164 consolidation, 93, 98, 102 construction, 18, 19, 35, 91, 93, 126 consumption, 1, 105, 154 continuing, 99 continuity, 102 contralateral hemisphere, 127, 132 control, 4, 13, 24, 29, 51, 52, 72, 85, 87, 93, 100, 102, 112, 119, 124, 143, 145, 155, 170, 172, 175, 179, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 191, 194, 195, 198, 203 control group, 112, 155 controlled, 14, 39, 75, 142, 143, 184 convective, 167 conversion, 23 coronary arteries, 176 correlation, 3, 25, 28, 38, 46, 65, 67, 70, 75, 85, 86, 93, 96, 100, 102, 111, 114, 120, 137, 186 correlation coefficient, 114 correlation function, 100 cortex, 1, 26, 49, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, 66, 76, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 96, 97, 103, 104, 113, 114, 117, 118, 119, 124, 131, 132, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 157, 165, 180, 188, 193 cortical, 24, 26, 27, 43, 83, 84, 85, 86, 88, 91, 93, 98, 100, 103, 104, 147, 150, 151, 178, 183, 186, 198 cortical neurons, 24, 26, 84, 103, 183 coupling, v, 5, 16, 22, 67, 83, 84, 88, 101, 102, 104, 109, 120, 163, 164 cranial nerve, 33 craniotomy, 143 critical analysis, 136 critical points, 165 CSF, 25, 33, 167 culture, 125 cyclic AMP, 201 cytoplasm, 159 cytotoxic, 137, 139 cytotoxic agents, 137
D data analysis, 112 data processing, 35 death, 126, 188 decay, 204
decerebration, 192 deduction, 41, 72 defense, 105, 106, 107 deficiency, 66, 79 deficit, 28, 79, 105 definition, 99 deformability, 141, 159 deformation, 5, 22 degree, 2, 3, 14, 15, 23, 25, 38, 43, 61, 70, 75, 85, 88, 89, 136, 140, 173 delivery, 103, 187 delta, 85 demand, 67, 70, 71, 72, 77, 84 dementia, 83, 183 denaturation, 184 dendrites, 148 denervation, 32, 34, 109, 161, 164 density, 3, 84, 129, 147, 148, 149, 152, 163 depolarization, 27, 28 depression, 84, 176, 190 desire, 143 destruction, 124, 140, 157 desynchronization, 2, 84, 85, 96, 118, 125 detection, 178 deviation, 19, 45, 57, 61, 92, 95 differentiation, 1, 44, 89, 204 diffusion, 15, 17, 27, 137 dilation, 9, 24, 29, 30, 33, 42, 43, 51, 52, 139, 196 dipole, 125 direct action, 25, 26, 31, 120 direct measure, 2, 11, 15 discharges, 68, 125, 178 discomfort, 86 discrimination, 103 diseases, 86 displacement, 72, 77 disposition, 127, 128 distribution, 25, 29, 42, 66, 78, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 147, 148, 149, 152, 164, 180, 185, 203 diurnal, 177 division, 135 DNA, 136, 137 dogs, 25, 28, 32, 68, 105, 141, 173, 174, 175, 177, 178, 180, 181, 186, 201, 202 dopamine, 168 Doppler, 15, 174 dreaming, 191 drug addict, 136 drug addiction, 136 drug-induced, 171
Index drugs, 93, 105, 184, 188, 200 ductus arteriosus, 199 dura mater, 25, 31, 142 duration, 13, 14, 17, 38, 47, 72, 76, 89, 95, 99, 114, 115, 117, 128, 135, 136, 137, 140, 144, 153, 154, 202
E ecological, 124 edema, 72, 139 EEG, 2, 65, 70, 85, 105, 112, 125, 169, 178, 183, 195 EEG patterns, 183 efferent nerve, 163 ego, 190, 197 elaboration, 93 elasticity, 40, 41 elderly, 83, 141 electric current, 17 electrical, 1, 2, 22, 24, 26, 30, 32, 33, 34, 67, 68, 69, 84, 85, 86, 111, 112, 113, 116, 117, 118, 123, 124, 125, 132, 161, 163, 168, 169, 172, 175, 176, 181, 183, 184, 188 electrochemical, 17, 75, 92, 126 electrodes, 17, 35, 36, 66, 69, 89, 92, 93, 96, 113, 127, 128, 129, 167 electroencephalogram, 65 electrolysis, 186 electromagnetic, 124, 125 electromagnetic waves, 124, 125 electron, 33, 142, 178 electron paramagnetic resonance, 142, 178 electrons, 68 electrophysiological, 92, 104, 112 elongation, 178 emission, 15, 188 emotional, 89, 90, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 106, 108, 109, 111, 164, 165, 170 emotional reactions, 89 emotional state, 90, 109 emotional stimuli, 89, 100, 170 emotions, 89, 100, 101, 105, 164, 165 employment, 125 endogenous, 187 endothelial cell, 25 endothelial cells, 25 endothelium, 25, 31 energy, 1, 67, 68, 69, 84, 85, 101, 112, 126, 137, 139, 182, 185, 186, 189, 191, 200 energy consumption, 1, 84
211
environment, 43, 61, 69, 102, 135, 138, 168, 201 environmental, 57, 61, 100, 136, 140, 164, 165, 194 environmental factors, 194 environmental stimuli, 100, 164 enzymatic, 24 enzymes, 184 epilepsy, 83, 183 epileptic seizures, 172 epinephrine, 194 equilibrium, 109, 173 erythrocyte, 158, 174, 193, 201 erythrocytes, 141, 148, 150, 151, 157 erythrocytosis, 141 estimating, 118 evidence, 1, 2, 4, 10, 16, 21, 23, 26, 27, 29, 43, 59, 77, 89, 101, 102, 103, 142, 171, 183, 192, 198 excitability, 113, 125 excitation, 59 exclusion, 55, 60 exercise, 180, 185 exogenous, 31, 187 experimental condition, 16, 39, 43, 56, 61, 88, 91, 92, 93, 99, 102, 105, 117, 118, 152, 162 expert, 4 experts, 6 exponential, 140 exposure, 4, 45, 125, 126, 127, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 140, 143, 144, 145, 147, 148, 150, 152, 153, 157, 158, 165 expulsion, 120 extracellular, 24, 26, 27, 67, 68, 172, 186, 194, 199 extrinsic, 183 eye, 83, 88, 112, 117, 119, 172 eye movement, 112, 117, 119, 172
F facial nerve, 30, 33, 188 fear, 105, 106 feedback, 13, 26, 120, 142, 143, 164 fetal, 184 fetuses, 199 fiber, 30, 108 fibers, 22, 30, 33, 68, 107, 193 fibrin, 165 fibrinogen, 141 fixation, 15, 103 flow, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 23, 26, 28, 32, 33, 34, 43, 67, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 109, 112, 116, 117, 120, 132, 136, 137, 139,
Index
212
140, 141, 153, 159, 164, 168, 174, 177, 178, 182, 183, 184, 187, 191, 195, 204 flow rate, 153 flow value, 9, 10, 18, 43 fluctuations, 107, 113, 137, 182 fluid, 12, 24, 25, 27, 143, 172 food, 93, 99, 103, 104, 197 fragmentation, 136 free radicals, 141, 142, 143, 158, 159, 165, 178, 186 frontal cortex, 102, 103, 104, 105, 203 frontal lobe, 109 functional approach, 4, 31 functional changes, 102, 125
G ganglia, 3, 30 ganglion, 30, 32 gas, 35, 65, 70, 185, 189 gas exchange, 189 gases, 32, 34, 179, 188 general anesthesia, 199 generation, 1, 15, 17, 18, 19, 22, 35, 75, 92, 100, 125, 126, 142, 159 genistein, 182 glass, 17, 19, 126, 144 glial, 72, 113 glucose, 84, 88, 139 glycolysis, 136 goal-directed, 2, 103, 104, 105 goal-directed behavior, 2, 105 gold, 126 government, iv gray matter, 32, 88, 112, 197 groups, 24, 99, 108, 114, 143, 145, 147, 182 gyrus, 88, 89, 100
H H2, 172 haematocrit, 141, 158 harm, 60 harmony, 60 head, 174, 182, 194, 200 head injury, 174, 182 health, 185, 198 heart, 14, 25, 92, 100, 107, 169, 174, 178, 182, 189, 202 heart rate, 100 heat, 1, 15, 125, 132, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 158, 159, 169, 173, 182, 183, 188, 192, 202
heating, 125, 132, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 143, 144, 156, 157, 158, 180, 181 height, 71, 201 hematocrit, 72, 75 hemisphere, 26, 86, 88, 89, 127, 128, 183, 197 hemodynamic, 3, 29, 84, 109, 183 hemodynamics, 23, 86, 159, 174, 191, 196, 197, 201 hemorrhage, 140 heterogeneity, 16, 137, 164, 190 high pressure, 11 high temperature, 135, 137, 138, 153 high-speed, 38 hippocampal, 85, 113, 115, 117, 193 hippocampus, 85, 89, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 124, 165 Hippocampus, 115 histamine, 23, 31, 173 histochemical, 33, 184 histogram, 66 histological, 15, 29, 142, 144, 145, 155, 189, 190 HIV, 136 homeostasis, 57, 60, 67, 69 homocysteine, 198 homogeneous, 13 hormone, 29 hormones, 21, 23 horse, 169 Hsp70, 202 human, 1, 2, 25, 84, 104, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 165, 167, 169, 175, 178, 179, 184, 189, 194, 197 human behavior, 165 human brain, 1, 104, 194 human cerebral cortex, 84, 179 human subjects, 178 humans, 1, 2, 29, 68, 89, 100, 104, 180, 189, 197, 203 Hydrate, 142 hydrogen, 15, 17, 18, 19, 35, 75, 88, 92, 126, 131, 139, 168, 174, 175, 177, 186, 201 hydrogen gas, 168, 177, 186 hydrogen peroxide, 175 hydroxyl, 175 hypercapnia, 11, 24, 26, 27, 51, 167, 168, 173, 180, 186, 195, 201 hypercarbia, 168 hyperemia, 1, 21, 23, 24, 25, 29, 68, 70, 71, 72, 75, 83, 84, 86, 129, 132, 172, 189, 197, 202 hyperglycemia, 136 hyperlipoproteinemia, 159 hyperplasia, 146, 147
Index hypertension, 14, 32, 33, 35, 159, 163, 180, 188, 202, 204, 205 hyperthermia, v, vi, 6, 121, 125, 126, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 165, 171, 172, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 184, 185, 186, 188, 189, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 204 hypocapnia, 24, 27, 67, 87, 180 hypotension, 13, 14, 24, 35, 168, 186, 188 hypotensive, 196 hypothalamic, 67, 173, 186 hypothalamus, 30, 100, 112, 113, 163, 177 hypothesis, 1, 13, 22, 23, 26, 30, 33, 71, 72, 73, 77, 78, 111, 142, 178 hypoxemia, 187, 189, 199 hypoxia, 11, 24, 29, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76, 84, 88, 154, 174, 176, 178, 180, 181, 184, 186, 187, 189, 195, 199, 202, 203, 205 hypoxic, 67, 69, 72, 73, 76, 136, 137, 173, 180, 189 hypoxic stress, 180
I identification, 113, 151 illumination, 87, 103 image analysis, 174 imaging, 68 immunoglobulin, 141 impotency, 60 in vitro, 44, 138, 168, 198 in vivo, 15, 22, 33, 138, 190, 191, 195, 196, 198 inactivation, 2, 31 inclusion, 136 independence, 75 indication, 1, 30, 199 indicators, 15 indices, 117, 118, 125 indirect measure, 168 individual differences, 11, 72 induction, 13, 17, 125, 126, 179, 185 inert, 32, 34, 92, 185 inertia, 15 infarction, 201 inferences, 43, 85, 124 inferior vena cava, 14, 35 infinite, 4 infrared, 142 inhalation, 17, 26, 67, 68, 69, 72, 73, 88, 188 inherited, 159 inherited disorder, 159
213
inhibition, 103, 137, 140, 168, 181, 194, 203 inhibitor, 68 inhibitors, 205 inhibitory, 33, 103, 179, 185 initial state, 70 initiation, 67, 140 injection, 13, 14, 17, 33, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 89, 93, 105, 106, 107, 108, 142, 155, 186 injections, 33, 49, 108 injury, 60, 151 innervation, 5, 29, 30, 31, 33, 51, 107, 108, 161, 163, 171, 176, 182, 184, 193, 195, 198 inorganic, 25, 27 insight, 202 insomnia, 112 instability, 125 integration, 41 intensity, 1, 17, 26, 29, 33, 70, 72, 84, 86, 88, 89, 113, 117, 126, 138, 141, 154 interaction, 16, 23, 30, 33, 59, 125, 165, 170, 187, 191, 204 interactions, 125, 140, 165 interference, 125, 179 international, 167 interpretation, 9, 21, 26, 168, 192 interstitial, 24, 139, 176, 177, 189 interval, 4, 93, 137, 138, 144 intervention, 179 intracerebral, 3, 30, 43, 124, 163, 176, 186 intracranial, 33, 72, 86, 111, 197, 200, 205 intracranial pressure, 33, 72, 111, 197, 200, 205 intravascular, 9, 10, 11, 16, 21, 22, 23, 26, 28, 38, 57, 163, 190 intravenous, 49, 51 intravenously, 49 intrinsic, 2, 124, 196 invasive, 124, 133 investigations, 42, 196 ionic, 168, 171 ionizing radiation, 136, 137, 138, 171, 188 ions, 18, 23, 25, 26, 27, 125, 139, 186 ipsilateral, 131 irradiation, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 165, 176, 192 irritation, 163 ischemia, 11, 21, 28, 111, 141, 159, 199 ischemic, 21, 170 isolation, 1, 203
K K+, 27, 28, 67, 186, 187, 203
Index
214 ketamine, 127 kidney, 10, 11, 25, 180 killing, 198 kinetics, 193, 194
L lactic acid, 25, 72 land, 158 laser, 193 latency, 53, 71, 72, 75, 77, 128, 132 latent learning, 99 law, 17, 78, 102, 179 laws, 139 lead, 5, 21, 22, 27, 28, 32, 33, 43, 51, 55, 57, 58, 60, 84, 119, 132, 137 learning, 92, 93, 94, 95, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 129, 164 learning process, 99 lesions, 11, 144, 148, 149, 150, 151, 155, 156 leukemia, 136 leukemia cells, 136 limitation, 28, 34, 42 limitations, 4, 196 linear, 4, 15, 26, 33 linear systems, 4 links, 3, 13, 56, 58, 102, 161, 163 lipid, 25, 204 lipid peroxidation, 204 lipids, 199 liquidation, 61 liquor, 24 literature, 6, 10, 11, 13, 26, 39, 40, 41, 43, 56, 67, 84, 85, 102, 142 local anesthesia, 45 localization, 13, 15, 93, 96, 102, 123, 173, 177 location, 71, 99, 127, 128, 143, 150, 165 locomotion, 100, 102 locus, 30, 163 long-term, 125 loss of consciousness, 65 lumen, 4, 16, 29, 34, 108 luminal, 158 lying, 17, 22
M macrophages, 183 magnetic, 29, 68, 199 magnetic resonance, 29, 68 magnetic resonance imaging, 29, 68
maintenance, 1, 6, 24, 61, 67, 68, 72, 137 malignant, 125, 171, 172, 189 malignant tumors, 171 mammalian brain, 175, 198 mammalian cell, 184, 204 mammalian cells, 204 mammals, 138 mask, 31, 102, 164 mathematical, 39, 40 maze learning, 93, 96, 97, 101 maze tasks, 105 measurement, 2, 9, 15, 16, 17, 32, 34, 35, 66, 69, 111, 112, 119, 126, 127, 128, 131, 132, 144, 156, 168, 170, 173, 183, 186, 193 measures, 18 mechanical, iv, 12, 15, 43, 168, 178, 182, 184 mechanical properties, 182, 184 mediation, 27 medication, 136 medulla, 3, 130, 131, 132, 133, 165, 174 medulla oblongata, 3, 130, 131, 132, 133, 165, 174 membranes, 25, 51, 169 memory, 91, 93, 105 meningitis, 12, 195 mental activity, 1, 2, 88 mental arithmetic, 88, 200 mesencephalon, 112 messages, 67 metabolic, v, 1, 2, 5, 6, 12, 21, 23, 28, 29, 43, 51, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 67, 68, 70, 71, 72, 77, 81, 84, 88, 91, 102, 104, 105, 109, 113, 117, 119, 120, 124, 132, 135, 137, 141, 158, 161, 162, 163, 164, 170, 178, 184, 185, 189 metabolic changes, 124, 184 metabolic rate, 68, 141 metabolic shift, 84, 120 metabolism, 3, 12, 21, 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 31, 51, 61, 65, 67, 84, 86, 87, 88, 101, 102, 104, 105, 109, 112, 113, 119, 120, 123, 124, 163, 164, 174, 178, 180, 182, 183, 184, 186, 188, 189, 190, 191, 195, 199, 200, 201, 202, 204 metabolites, 21, 22, 23, 29 MgSO4, 143 mice, 139, 185, 188 microcirculation, 17, 67, 126, 136, 140, 141, 171, 180, 185, 189, 196, 199, 201 microcirculatory, 67, 159, 190 microelectrodes, 69, 126 microenvironment, 200 micrometer, 144
Index microscope, 144 microspheres, 33, 34, 190 microvascular, 179 microwave, 6, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 153, 165, 171, 177, 189, 191, 192, 200 microwave radiation, v, 6, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 130, 131, 132 microwaves, 125, 126, 128, 129, 131, 132, 133, 169, 180 mirror, 102 mitochondria, 66, 68 mnemonic processes, 103 modeling, 42 modulation, 103, 104, 123, 125 modulus, 40 molecular weight, 143, 155, 158 monkeys, 32, 103, 141, 197 monograph, 123, 125 morphological, v, vi, 1, 121, 135, 141 morphology, 172, 174, 194 motivation, 93, 99, 102 motor activity, 87, 95, 100, 101, 103, 106, 108, 168 motor area, 88, 97, 102, 103, 112, 142 mouse, 89, 90, 158, 169, 177, 179, 188 movement, 89, 92, 93, 95, 97, 100, 101, 103, 104, 107, 180 MRI, 15 muscle, 5, 22, 25, 26, 27, 28, 68, 168, 181, 182, 184 muscles, 21, 22, 25, 27, 28, 68
N narcolepsy, 191 National Research Council, 183 natural, 21, 163, 169, 182 necrosis, 135, 140, 141, 153 Nembutal, 45, 58, 75 neocortex, 118 neoplastic, 186 nerve, 5, 9, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 33, 58, 65, 69, 84, 113, 119, 126, 129, 161, 163, 171, 189, 202, 204 nerve cells, 84 nerve fibers, 5, 24 nerves, 9, 25, 30, 31, 32, 34, 163, 168, 173, 181, 183, 186, 188, 196, 197, 198 nervous system, 99, 118, 125 network, 3, 22 neural mechanisms, 120 neural systems, 124 neurodegeneration, 172
215
neurogenic, 5, 12, 23, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 44, 49, 50, 52, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 109, 123, 132, 133, 161, 162, 163, 164, 176, 184, 185, 187, 195, 197, 198, 203 neurons, 26, 27, 84, 102, 103, 104, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 157, 172, 177, 189 neurophysiology, 184 neurotransmitter, 31 neurotransmitters, 31, 142, 168, 176, 181, 183, 195, 196, 198 nicotine, 33, 194 Nielsen, 5, 30, 33, 138, 176, 193, 194, 195 nitrogen, 68, 69, 72, 73, 132 nitrous oxide, 185, 202 NO, 29, 68 NO synthase, 68 nociceptive, 86 noise, 89 nonparametric, 97 noradrenaline, 14, 25, 33, 168, 174 norepinephrine, 187, 194, 204 normal, 9, 22, 27, 32, 57, 58, 59, 61, 66, 67, 68, 70, 75, 78, 84, 86, 88, 106, 108, 125, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141, 143, 152, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 163, 171, 172, 173, 177, 180, 182, 185, 189, 190, 200, 201, 202 normal conditions, 32, 57, 58, 59, 66, 67, 86, 106, 108, 158, 163 normal development, 61 normocapnia, 201 nuclear, 158, 190 nuclear magnetic resonance, 190 nuclei, 27, 85, 123, 124, 132, 163, 175 nucleolus, 147, 148, 149, 151 nucleons, 183 nucleotides, 24, 27, 170 nucleus, 30, 147, 148, 149, 175 nurse, 89
O observations, 22, 28, 48, 55, 58, 67, 69, 91, 104, 112, 113, 165, 201 occipital cortex, 86 occlusion, 9, 11, 14, 22, 72, 140, 159, 165, 189 oncological, 6, 125 oncology, 136, 178, 203 operator, 15 opposition, 69 optical, 196 organ, 9, 10, 13, 22, 23, 28
Index
216
organic, 183 organism, 1, 60, 70, 102, 105, 135 organization, 2, 4, 6, 10, 31, 59, 60, 85 orientation, 2, 95, 99, 100, 101 oscillation, 60, 61, 115, 118, 125, 182 oscillations, 3, 112, 113, 114, 115, 117, 118 oxidation, 68 oxidative, 142, 178 oxidative stress, 142 oxide, 177, 185, 203 oxygen, v, 1, 6, 12, 28, 63, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 72, 73, 79, 84, 85, 88, 100, 105, 111, 113, 114, 119, 121, 126, 128, 131, 137, 141, 142, 154, 167, 171, 173, 174, 175, 176, 180, 181, 183, 184, 186, 187, 188, 189, 191, 195, 197, 199 oxygen consumption, 1, 65, 67, 84, 85, 112, 184, 187, 191 oxygen saturation, 65, 72, 154, 181 oxygenation, 126, 129, 136, 137, 167, 171, 172, 180, 183, 185, 192
P pacemaker, 181 PaCO2, 172, 184, 185 pain, 86, 203 paradoxical, 1, 112, 178, 198 paradoxical sleep, 178, 198 paralysis, 191 parameter, 3, 4, 14, 16, 84, 93, 99, 113, 141 parasympathetic, 30, 31, 33, 34 parenchyma, 31 parietal cortex, 95, 100, 101, 106, 108, 109 Paris, 167, 172, 187, 191, 192 passive, 2, 22, 32, 38, 40, 96, 109, 115, 117, 184, 189, 200 pathology, 3, 72, 85, 142, 182 pathophysiological, 137, 140 pathophysiology, 181 pathways, 14, 24, 30, 59, 163 patients, 72, 83, 85, 86, 88, 89, 111, 112, 136, 185, 194, 200, 201 penumbra, 147, 149, 151 perception, 191 performance, v, 25, 91, 102, 103, 104, 109, 164 perfusion, 11, 12, 14, 23, 29, 51, 72, 183, 185, 190, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205 periodic, 83, 104, 114, 115, 117 peripheral, 167 peritoneal, 155 permeability, 27, 139
permit, 85, 120 peroxidation, 199 PET, 172 pH, 25, 27, 67, 75, 119, 120, 135, 136, 137, 139, 140, 143, 154, 169, 176, 178, 179, 182, 184, 190, 193, 194, 195, 200, 203 pharmacological, 5, 30, 31, 34, 42, 105, 161, 181 phosphate, 139 phosphates, 51, 199 phosphocreatine, 24 photon, 15 physiological, 4, 6, 9, 10, 27, 31, 41, 66, 68, 98, 135, 137, 139, 140, 171, 176, 178, 192 physiologists, 4, 9 physiology, iv, 5, 10, 29, 140, 169, 176, 180, 181, 182 physiopathology, iv pig, 173, 199 pigs, 25 plasma, 141, 158, 178, 182 plasticity, 172 platelet, 158, 201 platelet aggregation, 158 platelets, 158 platforms, 91, 92, 99, 105 platinum, 17, 19, 66 play, 3, 26, 51, 53, 57, 61, 120, 123, 159 plethysmography, 111 plexus, 176 poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, 136 polycythemia, 141 polyethylene, 142 polygraph, 142 polymerase, 136 polymerization, 205 population, 102, 104, 136, 137 portal vein, 68, 168, 171, 184 positron, 178, 180 positron emission tomography, 178, 180 postsynaptic, 26 potassium, 23, 25, 27, 173, 176, 185 power, 21, 68, 86, 129, 174 preconditioning, 138 preference, 43 prefrontal cortex, 88 preoperative, 178 preparation, iv, 161 pressure, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 28, 29, 32, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 41, 43, 44, 45, 46, 50, 51, 57, 72, 75, 87, 111, 154,
Index 159, 161, 162, 163, 164, 169, 172, 175, 177, 180, 181, 184, 188, 189, 190, 191, 200, 201 preventive, 105, 165 primary visual cortex, 88, 184 primate, 103 primates, 32, 102, 104 probability, 17, 38, 39, 46, 48 probe, 15, 142, 143, 201 procedures, 14, 161, 197 production, 1, 15, 33, 158, 183, 204 progressive, 168 promote, 139 promyelocytic, 136 propagation, 171 property, 10, 40, 41 propofol, 202 proportionality, 38, 40 propranolol, 49, 51, 52, 53, 55, 162, 175, 194 prostaglandin, 194 prostate, 204, 205 protection, 105, 188 protein, 192 protein synthesis, 192 proteins, 158, 184 psychological, 89 pulse, 3, 18, 144, 191 punishment, 93, 99 pycnosis, 146, 147 pyramidal, 146, 147, 148, 177 pyruvate, 199
Q quantitative estimation, 113
R radiation, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 136, 137, 171, 172, 184, 191, 198 radiation therapy, 137, 172 radio, 137, 205 radiofrequency, 124 radiotherapy, 136, 141, 155 radius, 40 random, 164 range, 11, 19, 61, 66, 70, 71, 72, 73, 77, 84, 85, 96, 124, 125, 136, 138, 140, 141, 143, 163, 164 rat, 12, 24, 51, 68, 92, 93, 94, 95, 98, 105, 142, 168, 169, 171, 172, 178, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 189, 197, 198, 199, 204
217
rats, 24, 27, 28, 51, 91, 93, 95, 97, 99, 100, 101, 104, 107, 108, 109, 112, 124, 125, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 168, 184, 202, 203 reactivity, 27, 35, 175, 179, 184, 185, 186 reading, 86, 88, 183 reality, 42 reasoning, 197 receptors, 5, 25, 30, 31, 34, 49, 51, 52, 54, 69, 105, 168, 169, 184, 189, 193, 194, 198 recognition, 31, 65 recovery, 76, 85, 101, 129, 138, 139, 176 red blood cell, 158 red blood cells, 158 red light, 103 redistribution, 67, 85, 101, 102, 104, 105, 109, 112, 132, 164 redox, 176 reduction, 3, 11, 12, 13, 17, 42, 43, 53, 54, 59, 65, 67, 68, 72, 76, 94, 95, 120, 137, 163 reflection, 102, 103, 118, 139 reflexes, 59, 125, 175 regional, 10, 12, 27, 67, 86, 141, 169, 170, 172, 174, 175, 180, 183, 185, 186, 187, 189, 190, 191, 194, 196, 197, 201, 203 regular, 2, 23 regulation, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 13, 16, 23, 24, 25, 27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 41, 45, 48, 51, 52, 59, 60, 61, 65, 68, 71, 73, 75, 79, 87, 91, 93, 105, 108, 109, 119, 123, 124, 126, 161, 163, 164, 165, 167, 170, 171, 173, 178, 180, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 192, 197 Reimann, 188 reinforcement, 93, 99, 103, 104 relationship, 25, 84, 90, 100, 102, 141, 178 relaxation, 28 relevance, 171 reliability, 1, 44, 47, 96, 97 REM, 112, 115, 117, 119, 120, 165, 196 renal, 175, 184 repair, 137, 138, 139 reparation, 138 research, 135, 165, 175 researchers, 2, 87 reservoir, 3, 15, 30, 142, 143 resistance, 10, 12, 24, 33, 51, 67, 68, 87, 109, 137, 138, 159, 169, 170, 171, 175, 181, 182, 187, 191, 193, 203 resistence, 109 resolution, 15, 16, 96, 98
Index
218 resources, 69, 101 respiration, 70, 73, 75, 132 responsiveness, 14, 168 resting potential, 27 restoration, 53 retardation, 48 retention, 61 retina, 87 returns, 32, 70, 71, 100, 163 rheological properties, 140, 141, 142, 159, 165 rheology, 188 rhythm, 14, 22, 85, 96, 113, 118 rhythms, 114, 115, 117 ribose, 136 right-handers, 88 RNA, 204 rodents, 138 ROS, 183
S safeguard, 32, 58 safety, 141, 155 saline, 144 SAP, 2, 5, 6, 11, 13, 14, 18, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 60, 61, 75, 78, 93, 111, 112, 120, 126, 132 saturation, 18, 19, 65, 72, 154 scavenger, 143, 158, 159 schizophrenia, 83, 88, 183 schizophrenic patients, 88 school, 98, 99, 135 scientific, 161 scientists, 135 SDH, 137 search, 1, 92, 93, 95, 96, 163 sedimentation, 193 seizure, 26, 84 seizures, 174, 181, 182 selecting, 138 self-regulation, 164 semicircle, 145, 148, 150 semiconductor, 172 sensation, 86 sensations, 99 sensitivity, 26, 136, 137, 138, 140, 142, 155, 165, 167, 173, 190, 191, 195, 205 sensorimotor cortex, 86, 113, 114, 117, 118, 120 separation, 1 septum, 84 sequencing, 198
series, 44, 46, 47, 89, 93, 108, 127, 128, 130, 131, 132, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 149, 152, 156, 157 serotonin, 23, 30, 174 serum, 158 severity, 65 sex, 35, 113 shape, 75, 114, 147, 152 shear, 29, 158, 180 shear rates, 158 shock, 192 short-term, 65, 69, 72, 125, 135, 153 short-term memory, 65 shoulder, 87 shunts, 174 sialic acid, 180 sign, 84 signals, 29, 30, 103 signs, 65, 66, 83, 88, 101, 104, 105 silicon, 142, 143 similarity, 175 simulation, 190 sinus, 3, 67, 192 sinuses, 3 sites, 31, 67, 72, 88, 98, 114, 128, 181 skeletal muscle, 11, 168, 184, 197, 202 skin, 9 sleep, 83, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 117, 118, 120, 165, 169, 172, 176, 177, 179, 180, 182, 184, 187, 193, 194, 196, 197, 200, 203 sleep deprivation, 112 sleep stage, 112, 120, 165 sleep-wake cycle, 172, 197 smoking, 159 smooth muscle, 5, 10, 12, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 34, 39, 40, 41, 68, 169, 173, 174, 176, 178, 181, 182, 183, 187, 193, 195, 199, 200, 204 smooth muscle cells, 24, 28, 31, 40, 41 sodium, 187 soleus, 184 solid tumors, 139 solutions, 41, 42 somatosensory, 117, 118, 178 spatial, 42, 99, 137 species, 2, 25, 32, 154, 204 specificity, 1, 99 spectroscopy, 190 spectrum, 14 speech, 86, 88, 183 speed, 14, 140 spheres, 101, 104
Index spin, 142, 178 spinal cord, 199 stability, 57, 61 stabilization, 44, 70, 96 stable states, 161 stages, 65, 79, 97, 102, 103, 104, 109, 112, 164, 165 statistical analysis, 17, 42 steady state, 4, 144 stellate cells, 148 stereotype, 95, 100, 101, 164 stimulus, 29, 86, 89, 90, 93, 98, 99, 100, 163 stochastic, 113 strength, 103 stress, 2, 29, 180, 184 stretching, 9, 21 stroke, 182 structuring, 159 subarachnoid hemorrhage, 175, 200 subcortical structures, 26, 118, 177 substances, 23, 27, 28, 182 substitutes, 14, 178 suffering, 83, 86, 88, 112 superposition, 102, 164 supply, 2, 5, 14, 32, 66, 83, 121, 126, 140, 163, 171, 180, 189 suppression, 25, 26, 40, 59, 68, 69, 84, 103, 105, 107, 124, 177 surgery, 174 surgical, 14, 86, 143, 161 surgical intervention, 14, 86 surplus, 16 survival, 137, 138, 141, 142, 188, 200 survival rate, 137 susceptibility, 42 swelling, 158 switching, 73, 104, 128, 129 sympathectomy, 32, 42 sympathetic, 25, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 107, 163, 167, 168, 169, 172, 173, 181, 182, 184, 186, 189, 194, 197, 198, 202, 204 sympathetic fibers, 30, 33 sympathetic nervous system, 182 synapses, 59 synaptic clefts, 24 synaptic transmission, 59 synchronization, 2, 96, 105, 107, 119, 125 syndrome, 72, 89, 104, 132 synthesis, 35, 137 systems, 26, 33, 34, 101, 124, 125, 140, 162, 196
219
T tangible, 85, 112 target behavior, 102 temperature, 9, 119, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 132, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 165, 178, 184, 197, 204, 205 temporal, 32, 46, 47, 48, 51, 52, 56, 59, 83, 86, 87, 88, 92, 98, 100, 103, 104, 109, 140, 162 temporal lobe, 83 tension, v, 9, 12, 17, 18, 19, 26, 29, 40, 41, 42, 44, 65, 66, 67, 70, 89, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 106, 111, 113, 114, 119, 126, 128, 131, 164, 167, 173, 174, 175, 176, 181, 183, 193, 197, 199, 200 terminals, 26, 29, 30, 33, 86, 107, 108 TGF, 204 thalamus, 89, 100, 113, 163 theoretical, 23, 70, 72, 168 theory, 2, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29, 30, 33, 69, 72, 124, 185 therapeutic, 125, 136, 137, 138, 140, 141 therapy, 138, 139, 140, 169, 175, 180, 183, 197, 203, 205 thermal, 3, 89, 125, 131, 132, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 142, 143, 144, 182, 188, 205 thermal energy, 133 theta, 85, 96, 113, 115, 118 threat, 105 threshold, 11, 40, 67, 86, 190 threshold level, 67 thromboembolic, 159 thrombosis, vi, 135, 141, 159, 165, 177 thrombus, 158 time, 1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 13, 15, 22, 24, 25, 27, 30, 33, 38, 40, 41, 42, 44, 46, 47, 48, 53, 54, 55, 57, 65, 67, 69, 70, 72, 73, 75, 84, 88, 89, 92, 93, 95, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 108, 112, 113, 114, 118, 123, 125, 127, 128, 135, 137, 138, 139, 140, 154 time periods, 15 tissue, vi, 1, 3, 6, 12, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 31, 41, 51, 58, 61, 65, 66, 67, 69, 70, 72, 75, 77, 85, 105, 113, 118, 119, 124, 125, 126, 129, 132, 133, 135, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 163, 165, 171, 172, 173, 175, 176, 180, 184, 188, 189, 190, 192, 194, 198, 202, 205 tolerance, 137, 138, 184
Index
220
tonic, 21, 29, 103, 104, 178 training, 185 trajectory, 92, 95, 107 transection, 123 transfer, 95 transformation, 53, 55 transition, 70, 85, 111, 114, 115, 116, 117, 119, 120, 138 transitions, 177 translation, 6 transmembrane, 26 transmission, 49, 59 transparent, 15 transport, 25, 26, 69, 154, 171, 172, 180 transverse section, 126 trauma, 72, 132, 196 traumatic brain injury, 177 trend, 2 trepanation, 128, 129 trial, 32, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 102, 193 trial and error, 92, 93, 99, 193 tumor, 125, 126, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 153, 155, 171, 175, 194, 196, 202, 203 tumor cells, 125, 126, 135, 136, 137, 139, 175, 194 tumor growth, 139 tumors, 72, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 184, 188, 190, 200 tumour, 125, 135, 197 tumours, 125, 185, 189 type II diabetes, 190
U ultrasound, 172 umbilical artery, 175 umbilical cord, 184 unconditioned, 105 uniform, 67 urea, 24 uric acid, 139
V vacuole, 158 vagus, 14, 30, 51 vagus nerve, 14, 30 validation, 200 values, 10, 18, 25, 26, 34, 39, 42, 43, 46, 66, 84, 88, 128, 137, 185, 201 variability, 18, 24, 66, 103, 125 variable, 16, 72
variables, 72 variation, 5, 6, 9, 10, 14, 18, 21, 22, 23, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 44, 46, 95, 96, 129, 132 vascular, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 35, 36, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 48, 51, 52, 53, 57, 58, 60, 68, 83, 87, 108, 111, 123, 125, 138, 139, 140, 158, 159, 163, 164, 165, 167, 168, 169, 170, 174, 175, 176, 178, 179, 181, 182, 184, 186, 187, 188, 189, 191, 193, 195, 198, 199, 200, 203, 204 vascular occlusion, 140, 165 vascular reactions, 9, 28, 31, 39, 42, 168 vascular system, 1, 2, 4, 53, 125, 140 vascular wall, 9, 28, 29, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 68, 139, 169 vasculature, 140, 172, 189 vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, 176 vasoconstriction, 12, 29, 33, 50, 53, 54, 55, 109, 163, 164, 167, 168, 175 vasoconstrictor, 25, 87, 194 vasodilatation, 29, 67, 68, 108, 109, 111, 123, 124, 132, 158, 186, 187 vasodilation, 25, 27, 29, 50, 53, 54, 55, 109, 164, 165, 173, 182, 203 vasodilator, 22, 168, 171, 188 vasomotor, 25, 27, 39, 50, 174, 179, 184, 185, 191, 193, 196, 198 vasomotor nerves, 174, 196 vein, 3, 11, 31, 142 velocity, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 27, 32, 33, 34, 40, 41, 42, 44, 70, 88, 173, 186, 189 venous pressure, 143, 204 ventilation, 127 ventricles, 24 venules, 158 vertebral artery, 25 vessels, vi, 2, 3, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 44, 50, 51, 52, 57, 61, 67, 68, 111, 120, 132, 133, 135, 139, 145, 146, 156, 157, 158, 161, 163, 165, 169, 171, 172, 173, 176, 181, 184, 187, 193, 195, 203 viruses, 136 viscosity, 40, 41, 141, 158, 165, 199, 202 visible, 145, 147 vision, 161 visual, 3, 26, 85, 87, 88, 92, 97, 98, 101, 102, 103, 144, 145 visual area, 85, 87, 97, 98, 101, 102 visual stimuli, 103
Index visualization, 15
W waking, v, 67, 83, 111, 119, 177, 182, 196, 203 walking, 99 water, 86, 99, 171, 185 waveguide, 126 waveguides, 126 white blood cells, 158 white matter, 112 wires, 17, 19 Wistar rats, 142 withdrawal, 59, 60, 129 workability, 92 workers, 6
X x-ray, 188
Y yield, 13
221