| Literature DB >> 29191963 |
Anthony R Bain1,2, Philip N Ainslie1, Ryan L Hoiland1, Otto F Barak3,4, Ivan Drvis5, Mike Stembridge6, Douglas M MacLeod7, Jane McEneny8, Benjamin S Stacey9, Eduoard Tuaillon10, Nicola Marchi11, Alexis Fayd'Herbe De Maudave11, Zeljko Dujic3, David B MacLeod12, Damian M Bailey9.
Abstract
Static apnea provides a unique model that combines transient hypertension, hypercapnia, and severe hypoxemia. With apnea durations exceeding 5 min, the purpose of the present study was to determine how that affects cerebral free-radical formation and the corresponding implications for brain structure and function. Measurements were obtained before and following a maximal apnea in 14 divers with transcerebral exchange kinetics, measured as the product of global cerebral blood flow (duplex ultrasound) and radial arterial to internal jugular venous concentration differences ( a-vD). Apnea increased the systemic (arterial) and, to a greater extent, the regional (jugular venous) concentration of the ascorbate free radical, resulting in a shift from net cerebral uptake to output ( P < 0.05). Peroxidation (lipid hydroperoxides, LDL oxidation), NO bioactivity, and S100β were correspondingly enhanced ( P < 0.05), the latter interpreted as minor and not a pathologic disruption of the blood-brain barrier. However, those changes were insufficient to cause neuronal-parenchymal damage confirmed by the lack of change in the a-vD of neuron-specific enolase and human myelin basic protein ( P > 0.05). Collectively, these observations suggest that increased cerebral oxidative stress following prolonged apnea in trained divers may reflect a functional physiologic response, rather than a purely maladaptive phenomenon.-Bain, A. R., Ainslie, P. N., Hoiland, R. L., Barak, O. F., Drvis, I., Stembridge, M., MacLeod, D. M., McEneny, J., Stacey, B. S., Tuaillon, E., Marchi, N., De Maudave, A. F., Dujic, Z., MacLeod, D. B., Bailey, D. M. Competitive apnea and its effect on the human brain: focus on the redox regulation of blood-brain barrier permeability and neuronal-parenchymal integrity.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral perfusion; free radicals; hypercapnea; hypertension; hypoxia
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29191963 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201701031R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191