Literature DB >> 27736719

Cerebrovascular dysfunction following subfailure axial stretch.

E David Bell1, Anthony J Donato2, Kenneth L Monson3.   

Abstract

Cerebral blood vessels are vital to maintaining the health of the brain. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) commonly results in autoregulatory dysfunction and associated failure of cerebral vessels to maintain homeostasis in the brain. While post-injury changes to brain biochemistry are known to contribute to this dysfunction, tissue deformation may also directly alter vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) function. As a first step toward understanding stretch-induced dysfunction, this study investigates the effect of overstretch on the contractile behavior of SMCs in middle cerebral arteries (MCAs). We hypothesized that vessel function is altered above a threshold of stretch and strain rate. Twenty-four MCAs from Sprague Dawley rats were tested. Following development of basal SMC tone, vessels were subjected to increasing levels of isosmotic extracellular potassium (K+). Samples were then subjected to an axial overstretch of either 1.2*λIV or 1.3*λIV at strain rates of 0.2 or 20s-1. Following overstretch, SMC contractile behavior was measured again, both immediately and 60min after overstretch. Control vessels were subjected to the same protocol but without overstretch. SMC contractile behavior was characterized using both percent contraction (%C) relative to the fully dilated inner diameter and the K+ dose required to evoke the half maximal contractile response (EC50). Control vessels exhibited increased sensitivity to K+ in successive characterization tests, so all effects were quantified relative to the time-matched control response. Samples exhibited the typical biphasic response to extracellular K+, dilating and contracting in response to small and large K+ concentrations, respectively. As hypothesized, axial overstretch altered SMC contractile behavior, as seen in a decrease in %C for sub-maximal contractile K+ doses (p<0.05) and an increase in EC50 (p<0.01), but only for the test group stretched rapidly to 1.3*λIV. While the change in %C was only significantly different immediately after overstretch, the change to EC50 persisted for 60min. These results indicate that deformation can alter SMC contractile behavior and thus potentially play a role in cerebrovascular autoregulatory dysfunction independent of the pathological chemical environment in the brain post-TBI.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autoregulatory dysfunction; Damage; Rat cerebral blood vessels; Traumatic brain injury

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27736719      PMCID: PMC5154909          DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2016.09.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mech Behav Biomed Mater        ISSN: 1878-0180


  55 in total

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10.  Subfailure overstretch induces persistent changes in the passive mechanical response of cerebral arteries.

Authors:  E David Bell; Jacob W Sullivan; Kenneth L Monson
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2015-01-28
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4.  The Effects of Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta on Cerebral Blood Flow, Intracranial Pressure, and Brain Tissue Oxygen Tension in a Rodent Model of Penetrating Ballistic-Like Brain Injury.

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