| Literature DB >> 29458412 |
Shasha Chen1, Christopher Lotz2, Norbert Roewer2, Jens-Albert Broscheit2.
Abstract
Volatile anesthetic-induced preconditioning (APC) has shown to have cardiac and cerebral protective properties in both pre-clinical models and clinical trials. Interestingly, accumulating evidences demonstrate that, except from some specific characters, the underlying molecular mechanisms of APC-induced protective effects in myocytes and neurons are very similar; they share several major intracellular signaling pathways, including mediating mitochondrial function, release of inflammatory cytokines and cell apoptosis. Among all the experimental results, cortical spreading depolarization is a relative newly discovered cellular mechanism of APC, which, however, just exists in central nervous system. Applying volatile anesthetic preconditioning to clinical practice seems to be a promising cardio-and neuroprotective strategy. In this review, we also summarized and discussed the results of recent clinical research of APC. Despite all the positive experimental evidences, large-scale, long-term, more precisely controlled clinical trials focusing on the perioperative use of volatile anesthetics for organ protection are still needed.Entities:
Keywords: APC; Apoptosis; Ischemia–reperfusion injury; Mitochondria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29458412 PMCID: PMC5819224 DOI: 10.1186/s40001-018-0308-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
Fig. 1Similar molecular signaling pathways of anti-apoptotic effect in cardiomyocytes and neurons induced by APC
Clinical studies of the protective effects of VAs
| Surgery | Patients and number ( | Volatile anesthetics and dose | Outcome | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardioprotection | Cardiopulmonary bypass | Sevoflurane | Increase of troponin I ↓ | De Hert et al. [ | |
| Cardiopulmonary bypass | Elderly high-riska patients, | Sevoflurane | Decrease in cardiac index (CI) post-CPB ↓ | De Hert et al. [ | |
| Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting | Sevoflurane | Post-surgical cardiac Troponin I ↓ | Wang et al. [ | ||
| Off-pump coronary artery bypass | Isoflurane | Post-surgical cardiac index ↑ | Tempe et al. [ | ||
| Off-pump coronary artery bypass | Sevoflurane | Increase of troponin I ↓ | Guerrero Orriach et al. [ | ||
| On-pump coronary artery bypass | Isoflurane 2.5% | Hemodynamic recovery ↑ | Amr et al. [ | ||
| Cerebral protection | Cardiopulmonary bypass | Sevoflurane | Cognitive function ↑ | Schoen et al. [ | |
| Cardiopulmonary bypass | Sevoflurane | Postoperative Mg disorders ↓ | Dabrowski et al. [ |
CPB cardiopulmonary bypass, MAC minimal alveolar concentration
aElderly high-risk: older than 70 years with three-vessel disease and an ejection fraction less than 50% with impaired length-dependent regulation of myocardial function
bN-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide
cPreconditioning with a 10-min exposure to isoflurane 2.5% followed by 5-min washout
dSensitive marker of brain injury: matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)