| Literature DB >> 29970193 |
Hilary A Seifert1,2, Halina Offner3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stroke is the fifth leading cause of death and the leading cause of long-term disability in the USA, costing $40.2 billion in direct and indirect costs. Globally, stroke is the second leading cause of death and has a higher prevalence in lower- and middle-income countries compared to high-income countries. The role of the spleen in stroke has been studied in rodent models of stroke and is seen as a major contributor to increased secondary neural injury after stroke. Splenectomy 2 weeks prior to ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke in mice and rats shows decreased infarct volumes. Additionally, the spleen decreases in size following stroke in rodents. Pro-inflammatory mediators are also increased in the spleen and subsequently the brain after stroke. These data in preclinical models of stroke have led stroke neurologists to look at the splenic response in stroke subjects. The outcomes of these studies suggest the spleen is responding in a similar manner in stroke subjects as it is in animal models of stroke.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Clinical studies; Immune response; Splenectomy; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29970193 PMCID: PMC6030736 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-018-1239-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Studies looking at the splenic response to stroke
| Species | Type | Duration | Citation | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Observations | Splenocyte apoptosis | Mus | tMCAO | 96 h | [ |
| Increased IFNg levels | Mus | tMCAO | 96 h | [ | |
| Rat | pMCAO | 96 h | [ | ||
| Splenic contraction | Rat | pMCAO | 96 h | [ | |
| Change in spleen size | Hu | Ischemic | Variable | [ | |
| Hu | Ischemic hemorrhagic | Variable | [ | ||
| Splenic contraction (some subjects) | Hu | Ischemic hemorrhagic | Variable | [ | |
| SIRS with splenic contraction (some subjects) | Hu | Ischemic | Variable | [ | |
| Pre-treatment | Splenectomy protection (males only) | Mus | tMCAO | 96 h | [ |
| Splenectomy protection | Mus | tMCAO | 96 h | [ | |
| Rat | pMCAO | 96 h | [ | ||
| Rat | ICH | 72 h | [ | ||
| Carvedilol | Rat | pMCAO | 48 h | [ | |
| Post-treatment | RTL | Mus | tMCAO | 96 h | [ |
| Splenic irradiation | Rat | tMCAO | 48 h, 7 days | [ | |
| HUCBC’s | Rat | pMCAO | 48 h, 96 h | [ | |
| NSC | Rat | ICH | 72 h | [ |
This table summarizes experiments that involve the splenic response in stroke. Some observational studies, some pre-treatment studies, some post-treatment studies. Studies with mice, rats, and human stroke subjects are included
Fig. 1The splenic immune response to stroke. The spleen responds to stroke in mice, rats, and humans after cerebral ischemia. In experimental models with mice and rats using MCAO as a model for ischemic stroke, the spleen decreases in size. In mice, this is due to splenic apoptosis and loss of cells. In rats, the spleen contracts and releases immune cells into circulation. In stroke subjects, the spleen contracts in some individuals. The spleen’s involvement in post-stroke events contributes to secondary neural injury and worse outcomes. When the spleen is targeted in animal models of stroke, using splenectomy, this decreases neural injury in mice and rats. Can targeting the spleen in humans improve clinical outcomes by decreasing neural injury? * indicates splenectomy 2 weeks prior to MCAO. # splenectomy only works in male mice