| Literature DB >> 30906928 |
Jianming Xiang1, Anuska V Andjelkovic1,2, Ningna Zhou1,3, Ya Hua1, Guohua Xi1, Michael M Wang4,5, Richard F Keep1.
Abstract
A variety of conditioning stimuli (e.g. ischemia or hypoxia) can protect against stroke-induced brain injury. While most attention has focused on the effects of conditioning on parenchymal injury, there is considerable evidence that such stimuli also protect the cerebrovasculature, including the blood-brain barrier. This review summarizes the data on the cerebrovascular effects of ischemic/hypoxic pre-, per- and post-conditioning and the mechanisms involved in protection. It also addresses some important questions: Are the cerebrovascular effects of conditioning just secondary to reduced parenchymal injury? How central is endothelial conditioning to overall brain protection? For example, is endothelial conditioning sufficient or necessary for the induction of brain protection against stroke? Is the endothelium crucial as a sensor/transducer of conditioning stimuli?Entities:
Keywords: blood-brain barrier; cerebral blood flow; cerebral ischemia; edema; permeability; preconditioning
Year: 2018 PMID: 30906928 PMCID: PMC6426135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cond Med ISSN: 2577-3240