| Literature DB >> 35711904 |
Hiroshi Ito1, Sanae Hosomi1, Yoshihisa Koyama2,3, Hisatake Matsumoto1, Yukio Imamura1, Hiroshi Ogura1, Jun Oda1.
Abstract
Sepsis is defined as a life-threatening multi-organ dysfunction triggered by an uncontrolled host response to infectious disease. Systemic inflammation elicited by sepsis can cause acute cerebral dysfunction, characterized by delirium, coma, and cognitive dysfunction, known as septic encephalopathy. Recent evidence has reported the underlying mechanisms of sepsis. However, the reasons for the development of inflammation and degeneration in some brain regions and the persistence of neuroinflammation remain unclear. This mini-review describes the pathophysiology of region-specific inflammation after sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE), clinical features, and future prospects for SAE treatment. The hippocampus is highly susceptible to inflammation, and studies that perform treatments with antibodies to cytokine receptors, such as interleukin-1β, are in progress. Future development of clinically applicable therapies is expected.Entities:
Keywords: delirium; dementia; hippocampus; interleukin-1β; sepsis-associated encephalopathy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35711904 PMCID: PMC9195626 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.912866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.702
Brain dysfunction in patients with sepsis.
| Model | Region | Acute or chronic phase | Characteristics | Symptoms | References |
| Human (sepsis) | White matter | Acute phase | MRI revealed leukoencephalopathy and ischemic stroke. There was an association between imaging findings and DIC and mortality. |
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| Human (sepsis) | Cerebral cortex, hippocampus, cerebral white matter | Acute phase | MRI revealed decreased volume compared to healthy controls. |
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| Human (sepsis) | Frontal lobe, hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 3 and 12 months) | Hippocampal volume at discharge with long delirium decreased on MRI evaluation; volume of superior frontal lobe decreased after 3 months. | Decreased executive function was associated with a decrease in the superior frontal lobe volume. |
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| Human (sepsis) | White matter | Chronic phase | White matter disruption on MRI evaluation was associated with longer delirium period. | Dementia after 12 months was associated with white matter disruption. |
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| Human (sepsis) | Frontal junctional cortex, lenticular nuclei, dentate nucleus, medullary olive | Acute phase | Pathological evaluation showed ischemic damage, which was a likely sign of apoptosis of neurons. |
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| Human (sepsis, pneumonia) | Medial temporal lobe, cortical region | Chronic phase (after 12–18 months) | Pattern and spatial recognition memory impairment. Dysfunction of parahippocampal complex. |
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MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Brain dysfunction in mouse and rat sepsis models.
| Model | Region | Acute or chronic phase | Characteristics | Symptoms | References |
| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Acute phase (after 6 h) | Microglial processes thickened and Iba1 staining increased. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Acute phase (after 2 h) | mRNA of IL-1β increased. | Hypothermia after LPS or IL-1β administration. Locomotor activity was reduced after IL-6, IL-1β, and LPS administration. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Acute phase (after 6 h) | mRNA of IL-1β and IL-6 increased. | IL-1 receptor antagonist treatment decreased hippocampal microglia and improved cognitive function. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Acute phase (3–9 h) | LPS treatment caused impaired memory retention. IL-1β antagonist treatment ameliorated cognitive dysfunction. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 7 and 63 days) | Excitatory synapses decreased by microglia. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Frontal cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum | Chronic phase (after 2 months) | LPS-treated mice showed sustained microglial activity and increased mRNA for IL-1β and TNF-α compared to NOS2 KO mice. | LPS-treated mice had cognitive deficits; LPS administration to NOS2 KO mice did No change in the cognitive deficits. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 7 days) | BDNF inhibitor treatment improved memory impairment and LTP. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 7 days) | Administration of sulindac sulfide suppressed amyloidogenesis and neuronal cell death. | Memory impairment caused by LPS. Memory impairment improved after treatment with sulindac sulfide. |
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| Mouse (LPS model) | Hippocampus | Acute phase | IL-1β treatment decreased membrane potential and induced apoptosis. |
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| Mouse (CLP model) | Hippocampus | Acute phase (after a few days) | Nox2 expression was inhibited after the administration of NADPH oxidase inhibitor. | Cognitive impairment was improved 15 days after NADPH oxidase inhibitor administration. |
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| Mouse (pneumonia model) | Frontal lobe | Acute phase (after 1 day) | Neutrophils adhered to the blood vessels in the frontal lobe. | Dementia after 14 days |
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| Mouse (influenza infection model) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 30 days) | Dendritic density decreased. | Spatial memory formation was impaired. |
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| Mouse (IL-1R1 reporter mouse line) | Hippocampus | Acute phase (immediately after IL-1 administration) | Stimulation of hippocampal endothelial cells with IL-1 induced IL-1 from microglia. |
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| Rat (LPS model) | Cortex, hippocampus | Acute phase (after 1 day) | Decreased brain glucose uptake in neocortical regions. Neuronal decrease in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. |
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| Rat (LPS model) | Hippocampus, midbrain, cerebellum | Acute phase (after 24 h) | iNOS inhibitor treatment decreased apoptotic cells and Bcl-2 positive cells in the hippocampus. |
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| Rat (LPS model) | Hypothalamus, hippocampus | Acute phase (2 h) | IL-1 mRNA, protein expression increased. |
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| Rat (CLP model) | Prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, striatum | Acute phase (after 24 h) | Treatment with IL-1β receptor antagonist improved BBB permeability and suppressed elevated IL-1β, TNF-α, and IL-6 levels. | IL-1β receptor antagonist treatment improved cognitive dysfunction after 10 days. |
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| Rat (CLP model) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase (after 10 days) | Minocycline treatment reduced cytokine levels and BBB breakdown in the hippocampus. |
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| Rat (intraperitoneal injection of E-coli) | Hippocampus | Chronic phase | Aging rats had elevated IL-1 protein levels in the hippocampus compared to young rats. |
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LPS, lipopolysaccharide; Iba1, ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; NOS2 KO mice, nitric oxide synthase 2 knockout mice; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; LTP, long-term potentiation; CLP, cecal ligation and puncture; BBB, blood-brain barrier.