| Literature DB >> 34367053 |
Darcy Lidington1,2, Hoyee Wan1,2, Steffen-Sebastian Bolz1,2,3.
Abstract
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a devastating stroke subtype with a high rate of mortality and morbidity. The poor clinical outcome can be attributed to the biphasic course of the disease: even if the patient survives the initial bleeding emergency, delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) frequently follows within 2 weeks time and levies additional serious brain injury. Current therapeutic interventions do not specifically target the microvascular dysfunction underlying the ischemic event and as a consequence, provide only modest improvement in clinical outcome. SAH perturbs an extensive number of microvascular processes, including the "automated" control of cerebral perfusion, termed "cerebral autoregulation." Recent evidence suggests that disrupted cerebral autoregulation is an important aspect of SAH-induced brain injury. This review presents the key clinical aspects of cerebral autoregulation and its disruption in SAH: it provides a mechanistic overview of cerebral autoregulation, describes current clinical methods for measuring autoregulation in SAH patients and reviews current and emerging therapeutic options for SAH patients. Recent advancements should fuel optimism that microvascular dysfunction and cerebral autoregulation can be rectified in SAH patients.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral blood flow; cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; delayed ischemia; microvascular dysfunction; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 34367053 PMCID: PMC8342764 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.688362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Cerebral autoregulation. Cerebral autoregulation is plotted as a relationship between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and mean arterial pressure (MAP). The autoregulatory range is defined by MAP levels that elicit maximal myogenic vasodilation (lower limit; ~70 mmHg) and myogenic vasoconstriction (upper limit; ~160 mmHg): CBF remains relatively stable as MAP changes within this range. Perfusion decreases when MAP drops below the lower limit; however, overt symptoms are not observed until a critical perfusion threshold is reached, usually 40–60% below normal levels. The MAP range where perfusion drops without symptoms is termed the cerebrovascular reserve capacity. Hypoperfusion and ischemia occur at MAP levels below the reserve capacity; hyperperfusion and vasogenic edema occur at MAP levels above the upper limit. It must be stressed that the lower and upper limits of autoregulation, the size of the cerebrovascular reserve capacity and the level of perfusion maintained by autoregulation all display variation. Thus, the plot represents regularly quoted values.
Research studies utilizing pressure myography to assess the effect of experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage on myogenic reactivity.
| Yagi et al., 2015 | ( | Mouse | Olfactory | SAH augments myogenic reactivity and reduces CBF. Etanercept (TNF inhibitor) and JTE-013 (S1P2 receptor antagonist) normalize myogenic reactivity and reduce neurological injury in SAH; etanercept improves CBF in SAH. |
| Lidington et al., 2019 | ( | Mouse | Olfactory | SAH augments myogenic reactivity and reduces CBF. Lumacaftor (CFTR corrector therapeutic) normalizes myogenic reactivity, improves CBF and reduces neurological injury in SAH. |
| Deng et al., 2018 | ( | Mouse | Middle Cerebral | Hemolyzed blood reversibly augments myogenic tone |
| Nystoriak et al., 2011 | ( | Rat | Parenchymal | SAH augments pressure-dependent membrane depolarization, calcium influx and vasoconstriction. |
| Wellman and Koide, 2013 | ( | Rat | Parenchymal | SAH augments potassium currents and myogenic tone. |
| Gong et al., 2019 | ( | Rat | Middle Cerebral | SAH increases TRMP4 expression/activity, resulting in augmented depolarization and vascular tone. |
| Harder et al., 1987 | ( | Dog | Basilar | SAH reduces basilar artery potassium conductance and induces basilar artery vasospasm. |
| Ishiguro et al., 2002 | ( | Rabbit | Basilar, Posterior and Cerebellar | SAH augments posterior and cerebellar artery myogenic tone. SAH augments basilar artery constriction |
| Koide et al., 2011 | ( | Rabbit | Posterior and Cerebellar | SAH augments arterial wall depolarization, calcium influx and myogenic tone. SAH reduces calcium spark frequency, suggesting reduced BK channel activity. |
A blood injection model of SAH was used in all publications. BK, calcium activated large conductance potassium channels; CBF, cerebral blood flow; S1P2, Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 2; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage; TRMP4, Transient receptor potential melastatin-4.
Figure 2Expected effects of subarachnoid hemorrhage on autoregulation. Altered vascular reactivity in subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) can have three hypothetical effects on cerebral autoregulation. Note that in this figure, cerebral autoregulation is plotted as the relationship between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral perfusion pressure (i.e., the difference between mean arterial pressure and intracranial pressure): this was done because intracranial pressure varies in SAH patients, thereby adding a variable to consider when relating CBF to mean arterial pressure in this pathological setting. The autoregulation curve in black represents the normal, non-pathological situation, while the red and yellow lines represent altered autoregulation. In (A), augmented myogenic reactivity (i.e., microvascular constriction) reduces perfusion, shifts the upper limit of autoregulation leftward and narrows the autoregulatory range. In severe cases, cerebral blood flow drops below the critical perfusion limit. In (B), upstream large artery constriction (i.e., angiographic vasospasm) reduces the perfusion pressure entering the microcirculation. This stimulates a right-ward shift in the autoregulatory curve, but perfusion deficits do not occur until the new lower limit is reached. In (C), both microvascular and larger artery constriction occur, creating a hybrid of (A) and (B).
Clinical studies assessing cerebral blood flow autoregulation in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Dernbach et al., 1988 | ( | SAH - 14/Unruptured - 10 | Hunt-Hess 1-4 | Thermal Probe | Patients with Hunt-Hess 1-2 scores display perturbed autoregulation when operated on within 7 days of SAH ( |
| Heilbrun et al., 1972 | ( | SAH - 10 | Hunt-Hess 2-5 | Intra-arterial 133Xe CT | 4/9 SAH patients displayed a global loss of autoregulation. 4/5 patients with intact autoregulation had satisfactory outcomes, while 3/4 patients with disrupted autoregulation had poor outcomes. |
| Tenjin et al., 1988 | ( | SAH - 9/Unruptured - 3 | WFNS 1-4 | Thermal Probe | SAH severity predicts perturbed autoregulation ( |
| Muench et al., 2005 | ( | SAH - 10 | Hunt-Hess 2-5 | TD-rCBF | Pathological values of autoregulation index were observed in the patient population. Reductions in mean arterial pressure result in decreased cerebral blood flow. |
| Nornes et al., 1977 | ( | SAH - 21 | Hunt-Hess 1-3 | Flow Probe | Grade 3 SAH ( |
| Pickard et al., 1980 | ( | SAH - 20 | Hunt-Hess 1-3 | Intra-venous 133Xe CT | Halothane-induced hypotension increased CBF in 15/20 patients, with 1 developing neurological deficits; 5/20 had reduced CBF during hypotension, with 4 developing neurological deficits. |
| Cossu et al., 1999 | ( | SAH - 77 | WFNS 1-5 | Thermal Probe | WFNS grade 1-2 patients ( |
| Darby et al., 1994 | ( | SAH - 13 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | Inhaled 133Xe CT | Dopamine-induced hypertension (90–110 mmHg) does not alter overall CBF; however, ischemic territories increase CBF while high perfusion territories decrease CBF. |
| Muizelaar et al., 1986 | ( | 4 SAH Case Reports | Hunt-Hess 2-5 | 133Xe CT | Phenylephrine-induced hypertension (17–50 mmHg) increases CBF. 3/4 patient MAPs were within the normal autoregulatory range prior to (90–98 mmHg) and following intervention (112–126 mmHg). |
| Hattingen et al., 2008 | ( | SAH - 51/Healthy - 15 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | MRI Spin Labeling | SAH patients have reduced CBF compared to controls. Vasospasm reduces CBF in downstream region. Impaired autoregulation is inferred by lack of compensatory vasodilation, as measured by CBV. |
| Diringer et al., 2016 | ( | SAH - 25 | WFNS 2-5 | 15O PET | Normal mean autoregulatory index following phenylephrine treatment. However, data values were highly variable, with many points outside “normal” range. |
CBF, cerebral blood flow; CBV, cerebral blood volume; CT, computed tomography; GOS, Glasgow outcome score; MAP, mean arterial pressure; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PET, positron emission tomography; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage; TD-rCBF, Transcranial Doppler relative CBF measurement; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies scale.
Clinical studies utilizing the Transient Hyperemic Response Test (THRT) in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Smielewski et al., 1995 | ( | 52 | WFNS 1-5 | Negative THRT result (<1.09) correlated with worse WFNS grade and GOS. |
| Lam et al., 2000 | ( | 20 | WFNS 1-4 | 6/20 patients displayed a negative THRT result (<1.09) 1 day after surgery: 5 developed DIDs.6/14 remaining patients had a negative THRT result 3–7 days post-surgery: none developed DIDs. |
| Rätsep and Asser, 2001 | ( | 55 | WFNS 1-5 | A negative THRT result (<1.10) was found in 22–35% of assessments over 0–19 days post-SAH ictus.Negative THRT results peaked at 0–3 and 7–14 days. Negative THRT associated with unfavorable GOS (1-2). |
| Rätsep et al., 2002 | ( | 50 | WFNS 1-5 | Negative THRT results (<1.10) were found in 33% of assessments over 0–18 days post-SAH ictus. Negative THRT results peaked at 0–3 and 7–14 days post-SAH. Negative THRT result associated with poor initial |
| WFNS grade (>2), vasospasm and impaired consciousness. | ||||
| Al-Jehani et al., 2018 | ( | 15 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | 7/15 patients had a negative THRT result (<1.09). A negative THRT result predicts the development of symptomatic vasospasm (5/6). |
| Rynkowski et al., 2019 | ( | 40 | Not Defined | 19/40 patients had a negative THRT result (<1.09). Negative THRT result correlated with Hunt-Hess score ≥4, higher APACHE II scores (12 vs. 3.5) and unfavorable outcome (mRS ≥4 at 6 months). |
These studies included SAH patients only. In Rynkowski et al., Hunt-Hess scores were obtained for 11/40 patients. APACHE II, Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation II; DIDs, Delayed ischemic deficits; GOS, Glasgow outcome score; mRS, Modified Rankin score; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage; THRT, Transient hyperemic response test; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies scale.
Clinical studies utilizing Pressure Reactivity Index (PRx) measurements in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Svedung Wettervik et al., 2021 | ( | 242 | WFNS 1-5 | PRx was >0 in SAH patients and tended to increase at 3–4 days post-ictus in patients with unfavorable outcome (GOS-E 1-4 at 12 months). High PRx values independently associate with unfavorable outcome. |
| Howells et al., 2017 | ( | 129 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | 80/129 patients had an extraventricular drain opened during ICP/PRx measurements. An open drain did not corrupt ICP signal and conferred small, but significant improvements in PRx. |
| Gaasch et al., 2018 | ( | 43 | Hunt-Hess 2-5 | PRx values are highest at day 0 post-ictus (0.31), decline and then rise at 4–10 days post-ictus. Patients with DCI and poor outcome (mRS 3-5 at 3 months) had higher PRx values compared to those without. |
| Johnson et al., 2016 | ( | 47 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | Patients with PRx >1 had lower CBF than PRx ≤1 patients over 14 day assessment period. Dichotomized PRx groups did not associate with Hunt-Hess score or predict the development of DCI. |
| Eide et al., 2012 | ( | 94 | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | PRx was higher (0.28) in patients who die (mRS 6), compared to mRS 0-2 (0.16) and mRS 3-5 (0.12) patients. |
| Bijlenga et al., 2012 | ( | 42 | WFNS 4-5 | PRx at 0–2 days post-ictus was higher in patients who died within 3 months (0.10; 9/25) vs. survivors (−0.17; 16/25). PRx did not predict the development of vasospasm; PRx values were not significantly affected by vasospasm. |
| Barth et al., 2010 | ( | 21 | Hunt-Hess 2-4 | PRx values were not statistically different between patients who developed infarcts (0.06; 8/21) vs. those who did not develop infarcts (0.10; 13/15). PRx did not correlate with ORx or FRx indies. |
These studies included SAH patients only. With the exception of Eide et al., all studies were retrospective. DCI, delayed cerebral ischemia; FRx, flow reactivity index; GOS-E, Glasgow outcome score-extended; ICP, intracranial pressure; mRS, Modified Rankin score; ORx, oxygen reactivity index; PRx, Pressure reactivity index; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies scale.
Clinical studies utilizing Mean Flow Velocity Index (Mx) or Systolic Flow Velocity Index (Sx) measurements in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Soehle et al., 2004 | ( | 32 | WFNS 1-5 | Baseline Mx and Sx values in SAH patients were similar to previously reported values for healthy volunteers. |
| Budohoski et al., 2012 | ( | 96 | WFNS 1-5 | Sx values are higher in patients who develop DCI (0.09; 32/98) vs. those who do not (0.00; 66/98). |
| Calviere et al., 2015 | ( | 30 | WFNS 1-3 | Mx within 4 days and at 7 days post-SAH ictus, but not at 14 days post-ictus, is higher compared to previously reported values for healthy volunteers. Mx alone did not predict the development of DCI. Worsening Mx, combined with the presence of vasospasm, predicted the development of DCI. |
| Zweifel et al., 2010 | ( | 27 | WFNS 2-5 | 13/51 individual Mx measurements indicated disturbed autoregulation (Mx >0.15). Mx correlated with TOx measurements when both recordings time-averaged over the recording interval. Non-averaged correlations were highly variable. |
These studies included SAH patients only. DCI, delayed cerebral ischemia; Mx, Mean flow velocity index; SAH, Subarachnoid hemorrhage; Sx, Systolic flow velocity index; TOx, Tissue oxygenation index; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies scale.
Comparison of clinically utilized techniques to measure cerebral autoregulation in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Thermal Conductivity Probe | Invasive | Regional level | Absolute | Continuous | Measurements limited to cranial surgeries. Measurement are not completed at bedside. | ( |
| Carotid Artery Flow Probe | Invasive | Low/Global level | Absolute | Continuous | Measurements limited to cranial surgeries. Requires surgical implantation of flow probes. | ( |
| Measurements are not completed at bedside. | ||||||
| 133Xe Computed Tomography | Minimally or Non-Invasive | High/Local level | Absolute | Snapshot | Rapid washout limits the number of views/projections per trial. Soft tissue may attenuate signals, especially in anterior images. Method requires specialized equipment. | ( |
| Measurements are not completed at bedside. | ||||||
| Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) | Minimally Invasive | High/Local level | Absolute | Snapshot | Long scan times required to obtain measurements. Very expensive equipment required. | ( |
| Measurements are not completed at bedside. | ||||||
| 15O Positron Emission Tomography | Minimally Invasive | High/Local level | Absolute | Snapshot | Long scan times required to obtain measurements. Very expensive equipment required. | ( |
| Measurements are not completed at bedside. | ||||||
| Transcranial Doppler | Minimally Invasive | Regional level | Relative | Continuous | Assumes that insonified artery diameter remains constant. Not a reliable measure of CBF. | ( |
| Transient Hyperemic Response Test | Minimally Invasive | Regional level | Relative | Snapshot | Highly prone to inconsistency. Assumes that MCA diameter remains constant. | ( |
| Pressure Reactivity Index (PRx) | Invasive | Low/Global level | Relative | Continuous | ICP measurements are invasive, but may already be included in standard of care. | ( |
| Decompressive craniotomy or ventricular drains may compromise ICP measurements. | ||||||
| Measurements when ICP is high are likely unreliable | ||||||
| Systolic Flow Velocity Index (Sx) or Mean Flow Velocity Index (Mx) | Non-invasive | Regional level | Relative | Continuous | Assumes that insonified artery diameter remains constant. Not a reliable measure of CBF. | ( |
In this table, invasive techniques require surgical access, while minimally invasive techniques require injections (intravenous or intraarterial). CBF, cerebral blood flow; ICP, intracranial pressure; MCA, middle cerebral artery.
Clinical studies involving nimodipine treatment in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.
| Allen et al., 1983 | ( | Not Defined | 116 (56 treated) | 0.35 mg/kg/4 h | YES | Neurologic, Radiographic | NO | Nimodipine reduced the incidence of severe neurological deficits, including death. Nimodipine reduced vasospasm in patients with severe outcomes, but not normal outcomes. |
| Philippon et al., 1986 | ( | Hunt-Hess 1-3 | 70 (31 treated) | 60 mg/4 h | YES | Neurologic, Radiographic | NO | Nimodipine reduced neurological deficit severity when vasospasm was present. Nimodipine did not affect the incidence of neurologial deficits or vasospasm. |
| Petruk et al., 1988 | ( | Hunt-Hess 3-5 | 154 (72 treated) | 90 mg/4 h | YES | Neurologic, Radiographic | NO | Nimodipine improved Glasgow Outcome Scores in Hunt-Hess 3-4 patients. Nimodipine significantly reduced neurological deficits associated with vasospasm. Nimodipine did not influence incidence or severity of vasospasm. |
| Mee et al., 1988 | ( | All Grades on | 50 (25 treated) | 60 mg/4 h | YES | Neurologic, Radiographic, CBF | Nimodipine reduced mortality, but did not change the proportion of good/poor outcomes. | |
| Custom Scale | Nimodipine did not affect the incidence of vasospasm and did not change CBF. | |||||||
| Jan et al., 1988 | ( | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | 127 (73 treated) | 0.03 mg/kg/h | YES | Neurologic | NO | Nimodipine improved neurological outcome in patients with vasospasm. |
| Pickard et al., 1989 | ( | Hunt-Hess 1-5 | 554 (278 treated) | 60 mg/4 h | YES | Neurologic, Infarction | NO | Nimodipine reduced cerebral infarcts and poor outcomes; there was a strong tendency for reduced mortality. |
| Messeter et al., 1987 | ( | Hunt-Hess 1-3 | 20 (13 treated) | topical/i.v. | NO | Neurologic, CBF | Nimodipine did not alter CBF, but it improved neurological outcome. | |
| Ohman et al., 1991 | ( | Hunt-Hess 1-3 | 213 (109 treated) | 0.03 mg/kg/h | YES | Neurologic, Infarction | NO | Nimodipine reduced mortality, but did not change the proportion of good/poor outcome. |
| Nimodipine reduced the incidence of cerebral infarcts and DCI. | ||||||||
| Rasmussen et al., 1999 | ( | Hunt-Hess 3-5 | 8 (pre/post) | 0.03 mg/kg/h | NO | CBF, autoregulation, CRMO2 | Nimodipine did not alter CBF or autoregulation. Nimodipine may improve CRMO2 during hypotension. | |
| Choi et al., 2012 | ( | Hunt-Hess 3-5 | 16 | 30–60 mg/4 h | NO | MAP, CBF | Each nimodipine dose caused small decreases in MAP and CBF. | |
| Hänggi et al., 2008 | ( | WFNS 1-4 | 26 (pre/post) | Intra-arterial | NO | CBF, radiographic | In patients with severe vasospasm refractory to systemic nimodipine, intra-arterial nimodipine transiently reduced vasospasm and increased perfusion. |
These studies included SAH patients only. CBF, Cerebral blood flow; CRMO.
Figure 3Molecular mechanisms augmenting microvascular constriction in subarachnoid hemorrhage and potential interventions. A mechanosensitive complex initiates myogenic vasoconstriction via membrane potential depolarization: this leads to calcium entry via opening of voltage-gated calcium channels; voltage gated potassium channels also open, leading to hyperpolarizing potassium efflux that limits the extent of depolarization (negative feedback). Intracellular calcium activates calmodulin (CAM), myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and the contraction apparatus. In addition, calcium entry and depolarization lead to the activation of sphingosine kinase 1 (Sphk1), which synthesizes and releases sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) into the extracellular compartment. Extracellular S1P activates the S1P2 receptor subtype (S1P2R), thereby activating the Rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) signaling pathway. ROCK signaling inhibits myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP), which enhances MLCK's activation of the contractile apparatus. Extracellular S1P is sequestered from S1P2R by the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), which transports S1P across the plasma membrane for degradation. In subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), potassium channels are down-regulated, leading to enhanced depolarization through disinhibition. SAH also stimulates inflammatory tumor necrosis factor signaling, which down-regulates CFTR expression and enhances the activation of Sphk1. This increases pro-constrictive S1P / S1P2R / ROCK signaling, which enhances constriction via the inhibition of MLCP. Therapeutics targeting these pathological processes include: (i) intra-arterially-delivered nimodipine (calcium channel blocker; limits calcium entry), (ii) retigabine (potassium channel activator; reduces depolarization), (iii) etanercept (inhibits TNF signaling; reduces S1P synthesis and increases S1P degradation), (iv) lumacaftor (increases CFTR expression; increases S1P degradation), (v) fingolimod (stimulates S1P receptor internalization; inhibits ROCK activation), and (vi) fasudil (ROCK inhibitor; limits inhibition of MLCP).
Potential interventions for treating dysfunctional autoregulation in subarachnoid hemorrhage.
| Potassium channels (Kv and BK) | Counteracts depolarization with a hyperpolarizing current | Channels are downregulated in SAH resulting in enhanced depolarization | Retigabine | Intervention activates potassium channels, thereby reducing cellular excitability. Overdosing potentially abolishes myogenic reactivity, thereby eliminating autoregulation. Intervention is not specific to myogenic reactivity or autoregulation. |
| Calcium channels (L-Type) | Permits extracellular calcium entry, which activates molecular effectors of cellular contraction. | Calcium influx is augmented in SAH due to enhanced depolarization | Nimodipine | Intervention attenuates depolarization-dependent calcium influx. Overdosing potentially abolishes myogenic reactivity, thereby eliminating autoregulation. Intervention is not specific to myogenic reactivity or autoregulation |
| S1P2R | Enhances calcium sensitivity | Calcium sensitivity is augmented in SAH | Fingolimod | Intervention reduces calcium sensitivity by antagonizing S1P2R signaling. Strong S1P2R antagonism may abolish myogenic reactivity, thereby eliminating autoregulation. Intervention is immunosuppressive. |
| ROCK | Enhances calcium sensitivity | Calcium sensitivity is augmented in SAH | Fasudil | Intervention reduces calcium sensitivity by inhibiting ROCK. Strong ROCK inhibition may abolish myogenic reactivity, thereby eliminating autoregulation. |
| TNF | Pathological mechanism only. Stimulates S1P production and downregulates CFTR expression. | Enhanced S1P signaling augments calcium influx and calcium sensitivity | Etanercept | Intervention normalizes myogenic reactivity and autoregulation by eliminating the pathological enhancement of S1P signaling. Intervention is immunosuppressive. |
| CFTR | Antagonizes S1P2R signaling by sequestering S1P away from receptors | Calcium sensitivity is augmented in SAH | Lumacaftor | Intervention normalizes myogenic reactivity and autoregulation by eliminating the pathological enhancement of S1P2R signalling. |
BK, calcium activated large conductance potassium channels; CFTR, Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; Kv, Voltage-gated potassium channel; MLCP, myosin light chain phosphatase; ROCK, Rho-associated protein kinase; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; S1P, Sphingosine-1-phosphate; S1P.