| Literature DB >> 20003330 |
Satish Krishnamurthy1, Jie Li, Lonni Schultz, James P McAllister.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Popular circulation theory of hydrocephalus assumes that the brain is impermeable to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and is therefore incapable of absorbing the CSF accumulating within the ventricles. However, the brain parenchyma is permeable to water due to the presence of specific ion channels as well as aquaporin channels. Thus, the movement of water into and out of the ventricles may be determined by the osmotic load of the CSF. If osmotic load determines the aqueous content of CSF in this manner, it is reasonable to hypothesize that hydrocephalus may be precipitated by pathologies and/or insults that produce sustained elevations of osmotic content within the ventricles.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20003330 PMCID: PMC2801660 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8454-6-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebrospinal Fluid Res ISSN: 1743-8454
Figure 1Representative examples of MRI images of animals after 12 days of infusion of artificial CSF (negative control), FGF-2 (positive control), 10 KD and 40 KD dextran (experimental) solutions. Note that the ventriculomegaly produced by FGF-2, 10 KD and 40 KD dextrans were similar.
Figure 2Box plot showing the ventricular volumes in μL for the different infusion groups. The center line of the boxplot is the median value with the upper and the lower margins of the box representing the upper quartile (75th percentile) and the lower quartile representing (25th percentile). The upper and lower fences represent the value equal to 1.5 times the difference between the lower and upper quartiles (interquartile ratio). The outliers are represented by a mark outside the box plot. Note that all the infusions resulted in enlarged ventricles except for ACSF, and were significantly different from the ACSF group (I vs II p = 0.002, I vs III p = 0.009, and I vs IV p = 0.023). Note: Two outlying symbols represent ventricular size of animals in the ACSF and 10 KD dextran group that were much larger than the rest of the group.
Ventricular volumes (μL) in animals for the different infusion groups.
| Group I | Group II | Group III | Group IV | Group V | Group VI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17.95 | 51.52 | 40.82 | 38.02 | 41.40 | 29.64 | |
| 16.43 | 33.17 | 43.55 | 34.60 | 43.46 | 37.29 | |
| 25.85 | 43.16 | 31.18 | 20.33 | 34.71 | ||
| 39.58 | 34.82 | 35.74 | 25.95 | |||
| 18.39 | 30.77 | 38.10 | ||||
| 23.48 | 41.78 | 39.00 | ||||
| 96.54 | 36.67 | |||||
| 24.81 | 35.53 | |||||
| 23.61 | 40.67 | 43.15 | 33.53 | 42.43 | 33.88 | |
| 20.94 | 38.99 | 38.28 | 36.10 | 42.43 | 34.71 | |
| 8.61 | 8.45 | 22.51 | 6.74 | 1.46 | 3.89 | |
Figure 3T2-weighted MRI of animal with hydrocephalus induced by 10 KD dextran. Note the periventricular edema (arrow top row last figure from the left) in the corpus callosum and external capsule and the patent cerebral aqueduct (arrow labeled Aq). Note that the ventricular enlargement was asymmetric with the larger ventricle on the side of infusion.