| Literature DB >> 24128424 |
Pedro Cabrales1, Yuri C Martins2, Peng Kai Ong2, Graziela M Zanini3, John A Frangos2, Leonardo J M Carvalho4.
Abstract
Ischemia and hypoxia have been implicated in cerebral malaria (CM) pathogenesis, although direct measurements of hypoxia have not been conducted. C57BL/6 mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) develop a neurological syndrome known as experimental cerebral malaria (ECM), whereas BALB/c mice are resistant to ECM. In this study, intravital microscopy methods were used to quantify hemodynamic changes, vascular/tissue oxygen (O₂) tension (PO₂), and perivascular pH in vivo in ECM and non-ECM models, employing a closed cranial window model. ECM mice on day 6 of infection showed marked decreases in pial blood flow, vascular (arteriolar, venular), and perivascular PO₂, perivascular pH, and systemic hemoglobin levels. Changes were more dramatic in mice with late-stage ECM compared with mice with early-stage ECM. These changes led to drastic decreases in O₂ delivery to the brain tissue. In addition, ECM animals required a greater PO₂ gradient to extract the same amount of O₂ compared with non-infected animals, as the pial tissues extract O₂ from the steepest portion of the blood O₂ equilibrium curve. ECM animals also showed increased leukocyte adherence in postcapillary venules, and the intensity of adhesion was inversely correlated with blood flow and O₂ extraction. PbA-infected BALB/c mice displayed no neurological signs on day 6 and while they did show changes similar to those observed in C57BL/6 mice (decreased pial blood flow, vascular/tissue PO₂, perivascular pH, hemoglobin levels), non-ECM animals preserved superior perfusion and oxygenation compared with ECM animals at similar anemia and parasitemia levels, resulting in better O₂ delivery and O₂ extraction by the brain tissue. In conclusion, direct quantitative assessment of pial hemodynamics and oxygenation in vivo revealed that ECM is associated with severe progressive brain tissue hypoxia and acidosis.Entities:
Keywords: anemia; cerebral malaria; oxygen delivery; oxygen tension; pial microcirculation
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24128424 PMCID: PMC3925700 DOI: 10.4161/viru.26348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virulence ISSN: 2150-5594 Impact factor: 5.882