| Literature DB >> 33401719 |
Ji Hyeon Ahn1,2, Tae-Kyeong Lee3, Hyun-Jin Tae4, Bora Kim2, Hyejin Sim2, Jae-Chul Lee2, Dae Won Kim5, Yoon Sung Kim6, Myoung Cheol Shin7, Yoonsoo Park7, Jun Hwi Cho7, Joon Ha Park8, Choong-Hyun Lee9, Soo Young Choi3, Moo-Ho Won2.
Abstract
Autonomic dysfunction in the central nervous system (CNS) can cause death after recovery from a cardiac arrest (CA). However, few studies on histopathological changes in animal models of CA have been reported. In this study, we investigated the prevalence of neuronal death and damage in various brain regions and the spinal cord at early times after asphyxial CA and we studied the relationship between the mortality rate and neuronal damage following hypothermic treatment after CA. Rats were subjected to 7-8 min of asphyxial CA, followed by resuscitation and prompt hypothermic treatment. Eight regions related to autonomic control (the cingulate cortex, hippocampus, thalamus, hypothalamus, myelencephalon, and spinal cord) were examined using cresyl violet (a marker for Nissl substance) and Fluoro-Jade B (a marker for neuronal death). The survival rate was 44.5% 1 day post-CA, 18.2% 2 days post-CA and 0% 5 days post-CA. Neuronal death started 12 h post-CA in the gigantocellular reticular nucleus and caudoventrolateral reticular nucleus in the myelencephalon and lamina VII in the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral spinal cord, of which neurons are related to autonomic lower motor neurons. In these regions, Iba-1 immunoreactivity indicating microglial activation (microgliosis) was gradually increased with time after CA. Prompt hypothermic treatment increased the survival rate at 5 days after CA with an attenuation of neuronal damages and death in the damaged regions. However, the survival rate was 0% at 12 days after CA. Taken together, our study suggests that the early damage and death of neurons related to autonomic lower motor neurons was significantly related to the high mortality rate after CA and that prompt hypothermic therapy could increase the survival rate temporarily after CA, but could not ultimately save the animal.Entities:
Keywords: Fluoro-Jade B; autonomic lower motor neurons; cardiopulmonary resuscitation; myelencephalon; neuronal death; prompt hypothermia; spinal cord
Year: 2021 PMID: 33401719 PMCID: PMC7824613 DOI: 10.3390/cells10010060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600