| Literature DB >> 36164392 |
Chao Jiang1, Hengtao Guo1, Zhiying Zhang1, Yali Wang1, Simon Liu2, Jonathan Lai3, Tom J Wang4, Shize Li5, Jing Zhang1, Li Zhu1, Peiji Fu1, Jiewen Zhang6, Jian Wang1,7.
Abstract
Acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a devastating type of stroke worldwide. Neuronal destruction involved in the brain damage process caused by ICH includes a primary injury formed by the mass effect of the hematoma and a secondary injury induced by the degradation products of a blood clot. Additionally, factors in the coagulation cascade and complement activation process also contribute to secondary brain injury by promoting the disruption of the blood-brain barrier and neuronal cell degeneration by enhancing the inflammatory response, oxidative stress, etc. Although treatment options for direct damage are limited, various strategies have been proposed to treat secondary injury post-ICH. Perihematomal edema (PHE) is a potential surrogate marker for secondary injury and may contribute to poor outcomes after ICH. Therefore, it is essential to investigate the underlying pathological mechanism, evolution, and potential therapeutic strategies to treat PHE. Here, we review the pathophysiology and imaging characteristics of PHE at different stages after acute ICH. As illustrated in preclinical and clinical studies, we discussed the merits and limitations of varying PHE quantification protocols, including absolute PHE volume, relative PHE volume, and extension distance calculated with images and other techniques. Importantly, this review summarizes the factors that affect PHE by focusing on traditional variables, the cerebral venous drainage system, and the brain lymphatic drainage system. Finally, to facilitate translational research, we analyze why the relationship between PHE and the functional outcome of ICH is currently controversial. We also emphasize promising therapeutic approaches that modulate multiple targets to alleviate PHE and promote neurologic recovery after acute ICH.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36164392 PMCID: PMC9509250 DOI: 10.1155/2022/3948921
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 7.310
The time phase and pathophysiology of PHE.
| Time phases | Time points | Events | Main reasons | Mechanisms | PHE classification | References |
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| Hyperacute | Within a few hours | Clot retraction and mass effect | (i) Increase in the interstitial osmotic pressure. | (i) Transendothelial Na+ gradient. | Cytotoxic or ionic edema | [ |
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| Acute | First 2 days | Coagulation cascade | Activation of thrombin and fibrinogens. | (i) Increase in inflammatory mediators (e.g., TNF- | BBB breakdown and vasogenic edema | [ |
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| Delayed | ≥3 days | Erythrocyte lysis | Hemoglobin and its degradation products (e.g., heme, ferric iron, and carbon monoxide). | Increase in the response to oxidative stress and the inflammatory response. | BBB breakdown and vasogenic edema | [ |
Abbreviations: PHE: perihematomal edema; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α; IL-1β: interleukin-1β; IL-6: interleukin-6; IL-12: interleukin-12; ICAM: intercellular cell adhesion molecules; MMP-9: matrix metalloproteinase-9; AQP4: aquaporin 4; BBB: blood-brain barrier.
The features of ionic and vasogenic edema in the perihematomal area after ICH.
| Classifications | Ionic edema | Vasogenic edema | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time phase | Undefined. It may appear in the hyperacute phase or in the late phase of ICH | Undefined. It always appears in the acute and subacute phases of ICH | [ |
| Mechanisms | Various ion channels and transporters in the BBB, including Sur1-Trpm4, NKCC1, AQP4, Na+-H+ exchanger, and Na+-Ca2+ exchanger, drive this process | Cytotoxic substances such as inflammatory factors and free radical metalloprotease-induced transendothelial permeability pore formation | [ |
| Cellular components in the BBB involved | Endothelial cells | Mainly endothelial cells | [ |
| BBB integrity | Intact | Partially destroyed (capillaries still maintain BBB structural integrity) | [ |
| Reversibility | Reversible | Partially reversible | [ |
| Substances transported | Na+, Cl−, and water | Na+, Cl−, water, plasma proteins, and other macromolecules (without RBCs) | [ |
| Destination of substances transported | From blood vessels to the extracellular space of the brain parenchyma | From blood vessels to the extracellular space of the brain parenchyma | [ |
| Imaging characteristics (CT, T1WI, T2WI, and FLAIR images) | It should present as a perihematomal hypodensity seen on CT. Shows an increase in the T2WI and FLAIR image and a decrease in the T1WI | Similar to ionic edema | [ |
| Imaging characteristics (DWI and ADC images) | The imaging characteristics of ionic edema in DWI and ADC images have not been well defined. If it is similar to cytotoxic edema, it will appear as a reduction in signal on ADC maps but an increase in DWI. However, the chances are high that the imaging features of ionic edema will resemble those of interstitial edema that present as a normal to low signal on DWI and a mild high signal on ADC maps | It shows a normal to low signal on the DWI and a mild high signal on the ADC maps in perihematomal tissue. If the imaging features of ionic edema are finally verified to be similar to those of interstitial edema in perihematomal tissue, it will be challenging to distinguish it from vasogenic edema | [ |
Abbreviations: ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; BBB: blood-brain barrier; Sur1-Trpm4: sulfonylurea receptor 1-transient receptor potential melastatin 4; NKCC1: Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporter protein-1; AQP4: aquaporin 4; RBCs: red blood cells; CT: computerized axial tomography; T1WI: T1-weighted MRI; T2WI: T2-weighted MRI; FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery image; DWI: diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging; ADC: apparent diffusion coefficient maps.
Figure 1The imaging characteristics of PHE at different stages after ICH. (a) Cranial CT images on days 1, 2, 4, and 7 after acute ICH in a patient. PHE (a rim around the hematoma indicated by yellow arrows) was not prominent on day 1 after ICH and gradually increased from days 1 to 7 after ICH. (b) MRI characteristics of PHE at 8 hours, 27 hours, day 4, and day 10, respectively, after the onset of symptoms in 4 patients with ICH. The red arrows in the T1WI images indicate the location of the hematoma. The signal characteristics of the hematomas changed over time in the T1WI and T2WI images after ICH, with PHE presented as a thin or wide rim with a strong signal in the T2WI and FLAIR images in the areas surrounding the hematoma. A strong signal on the DWI image but a weak signal on the ADC map appeared in the perihematomal area 8 hours after ICH. It may represent the appearance of ionic edema or cytotoxic edema in the perihematomal area. However, typical imaging characteristics of vasogenic edema in the perihematomal region were observed at 27 hours, day 4, and day 10 after the onset of the symptom. Vasogenic edema presented as a normal signal on the DWI images, and a strong signal surrounds the hematoma on the ADC map at 27 hours, day 4, and day 10 after ICH in 3 patients. Abbreviations: CT: computed tomography; PHE: perihematomal edema; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; T1WI: T1-weighted MRI; T2WI: T2-weighted MRI; FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; DWI: diffusion-weighted imaging; ADC: apparent diffusion coefficient.
The merits and shortcomings of different quantitative methods of PHE after ICH.
| Quantitative methods | Merits | Shortcomings | References |
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| Brain water content | It is widely used to assess the severity of brain injury in animal ICH models. | It cannot accurately reflect PHE due to the difficulty in separating the perihematomal tissue from normal brain tissue directly. | [ |
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| Brain swelling | It is a method most used to quantify the extent of brain edema in animals with stable volume of hematoma. | (i) It may be influenced by hematoma volume. | [ |
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| MRI image | MRI may represent the gold standard for detecting and quantifying PHE in animals. | The access of small animals to high-field MRI is limited. | [ |
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| CT and MRI images | (i) CT images can be easily acquired. | (i) It is challenging to choose suitable thresholds to outline the rim of the PHE. | [ |
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| Other methods | Some noninvasive methods including midline shift on CT or MRI images, physical examination, and indirect estimation of ICP may also reflect brain edema after ICH. | They are not sufficient to detect or monitor brain edema and could not directly reflect PHE. | [ |
Abbreviations: PHE: perihematomal edema; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; CT: computerized axial tomography; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; EED: edema extension distance; rPHE: relative perihematomal edema; ICP: intracranial pressure.
Variables that may aggravate PHE in patients.
| Baseline variables | Clinical variables | Hematological characteristics | Other clinical variables |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender and older age [ | A higher score on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [ | Higher platelet count [ | Cerebral venous drainage system damage |
| Genetic characteristics | Lower Glasgow Coma Scale score [ | Systemic inflammatory response (higher neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio) [ | Glymphatic system damage? |
| Higher glucose [ | Larger initial ICH volume [ | Higher admission hematocrit [ | |
| History of hypertension [ | Irregular hematoma or black hole sign [ | Higher admission time for partial thromboplastin time [ | |
| Higher admission SBP [ | Larger initial EED [ | Absence in warfarin preuse [ | |
| Impaired blood pressure regulation [ | Time from symptom onset [ | Higher serum levels of IL-6 and soluble CD163 [ | |
| Higher body temperature [ | Absence in sulfonylurea drug pretreatment [ | Higher serum MMP-3 or MMP-8 levels [ |
Abbreviations: PHE: perihematomal edema; APOE4: apolipoprotein E; AQP4: aquaporin 4; TIMP-2: tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2; Hp: haptoglobin; SBP: systolic blood pressure; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; EED: edema extension distance; MMP: matrix metallopeptidase; AIVF: absent in ipsilateral venous filling; JVR: jugular vein reflex; CVFV: cerebral venous outflow volume.
Figure 2Impairment in brain lymphatic drainage and the formation of cerebral edema. The meningeal lymphatic system constitutes the brain lymphatic drainage system in the dorsal part of the skull and the glymphatic system (a glia-dependent system of the perivascular space) present in the brain parenchyma. The meningeal lymphatics are involved in maintaining homeostasis and immune surveillance in the brain. The glymphatic system provides a pathway to remove interstitial solutes and wastes in the brain parenchyma. It is also a bidirectional exchange pathway between ISF and CSF. However, the meningeal lymphatic system may only function as a drainage pathway. The brain lymphatic drainage system is a crucial drainage route for ISF/CSF into the cervical lymph nodes (CLNs) or peripheral blood. Brain injury may alter the drainage function of the meningeal lymphatic system and glymphatic system and subsequently aggravate brain edema after ischemic stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI, etc. High ICP may reduce the flow of the lymphatic system from the ISF/CSF to the CLN or the venous sinus. Impairment in the glia-dependent system of the perivascular space, especially dislocation of AQP4 in the endfeet of the astrocyte of the glymphatic system, can lead to an increase in ISF/CSF influx to the brain parenchyma with a decrease in efflux from the brain parenchyma to ISF/CSF or CLN/blood. Reduction in the function of the lymphatic and glymphatic systems can also lead to a decrease in waste clearance and an increase in immunocyte accumulation in the injured brain. Although animal studies have indicated that brain lymphatic drainage dysfunction may facilitate the formation of brain edema after ICH, no studies have explored its relationship in patients with ICH. Abbreviations: CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; ISF: interstitial fluid; CLNs: cervical lymph nodes; TBI: traumatic brain injury; ICP: intracranial pressure; AQP4: aquaporin 4; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage.
Clinical studies on the relationship between PHE and neurologic functions after ICH.
| Quantitative methods | Study | Design | No. of patients | Functional outcome measures | Imaging modality | Median ICH volume on admission (mL) | Time phase for PHE quantitation | Findings |
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| Absolute PHE volume | Volbers et al. [ | Retrospective | 292 | 90-day mRS | CT | 17.7 | Peak PHE volume | The high peak volume of PHE was an independent predictor of the worse outcome on day 90. |
| Volbers et al. [ | Retrospective | 220 | mRS at discharge | CT | 22.8 | Within 12 h | The high peak PHE volume predicted a poor discharge outcome. | |
| Ozdinc et al. [ | Retrospective | 106 | 30-day mortality | CT | 2.14 vs. 18.73 for survivors and nonsurvivors within 30 d after ICH onset | On days 1-12 | The absolute area of the perihematomal edema but not the absolute volume of the perihematomal edema was an independent indicator of mortality at 30 days. | |
| Nawabi et al. [ | Retrospective | 811 | 90-day mRS | CT | 47 | Within 12 h | An increase in early PHE volume did not increase the probability of a poor outcome in OAC-ICH but was independently associated with poor outcomes in NON-OAC-ICH. | |
| Shirazian et al. [ | Prospective | 1,089 | 30-day mortality, 90-day mRS | CT | 22.5 | Within 48 h | The absolute increase in PHE within 48 hours after ICH was associated with increased mortality and worse functional outcomes. | |
| Appelboom et al. [ | Prospective | 133 | Discharge outcome (mRS) | CT | Less than 30 | Within 24 h | The effect of absolute PHE volume on functional outcome after ICH depended on the size of the hematoma, with only patients with smaller hemorrhages showing poorer results with worse PHE. | |
| Loan et al. [ | Prospective | 342 | Death or dependence (mRS) one year after ICH | CT | 48 | Within 3 days | The high volume of perihematomal edema did not predict a poor outcome. | |
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| PHE growth | Lv et al. [ | Prospective | 233 | 3-month mRS | CT | 13.4 | From baseline to 24 hours | Early expansion of PHE was associated with poor outcomes. |
| Ye et al. [ | Prospective | 197 | 90-day mRS | CT | 12.7 | From baseline to day 3 | An increase in PHE volume > 7.98 mL from baseline to day 3 may lead to a poor outcome on day 90 after ICH. | |
| Grunwald et al. [ | Retrospective | 115 | 90-day mortality or poor functional outcome (mRS > 2) | CT | 11.3 vs. 36.9 for patients with deep and lobar ICH | From baseline to 24 h and 72 h | PHE 72 hours was associated with poor functional outcomes after deep ICH, while PHE 24 hours was associated with mortality for deep and lobar ICH. | |
| Urday et al. [ | Retrospective | 139 | 90-day mRS | CT | 19 | PHE expansion rate between admission and 24-hour post-ICH | A faster PHE expansion rate 24 hours after ICH predicted a worse outcome. | |
| Murthy et al. [ | Prospective | 596 | 90-day mRS | CT | 15 | Within a period of 6 to 72 hours after the onset of ICH | The absolute increase in PHE during the first 72 hours after ICH was associated with worse functional outcomes, particularly with basal ganglia ICH and hematomas < 30 mL. | |
| Hurford et al. [ | Prospective | 1,028 | 90-day mRS | CT | 13.7 | From onset to 72 hours | An increase in EED in the first 72 hours was independently associated with decreased functional outcomes at 90 days. | |
| Wu et al. [ | Prospective | 861 | 6-month mortality | CT | 14 | The first 72 hours | A higher EED than expected was associated with mortality at 6 months. | |
| Venkatasubramanian et al. [ | Prospective | 27 | Barthel index, mRS, and extended GCS scores at 3 months | MRI | 33.6 | From admission to 48 h | The growth of edema volume was correlated with a decrease in neurologic status at 48 hours, but not with a functional outcome. | |
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| rPHE volume | Sykora et al. [ | Prospective | 38 | Early neurologic deterioration | CT | 20.63 | 48-72 h after ictus | rPHE independently predicted early neurologic deterioration. |
| Arima et al. [ | Prospective | 270 | Death or dependency at 90 days | CT | NA | On day 3 | Both absolute PHE and rPHE predicted death or dependency at 90 days. | |
| Gebel et al. [ | Prospective | 142 | 12-week mRS or 30-day mortality | CT | 12.2 | Within 3 hours after the onset of ICH and then 1 and 20 hours later | rPHE independently predicted a poor 3-month functional outcome. | |
| Staykov et al. [ | Retrospective | 219 | In-hospital mortality | CT | 35.7 | Increase in absolute PHE between days 1 and 3, initial rPHE | An increase in absolute PHE but not rPHE between days 1 and 3 was significantly predictive of in-hospital mortality. | |
Abbreviations: PHE: perihematomal edema; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; OAC: oral anticoagulant; NON-OAC-ICH: nonoral anticoagulation-related intracerebral hemorrhage; rPHE: relative perihematomal edema; EED: extension distance; mRS: modified Rankin scale; GCS: Glasgow Coma Scale; CT: computed tomography; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging.
Preclinical studies on potential therapeutic targets for PHE after ICH.
| Potential targets | Authors | Drugs/reagents/treatments | Species | Time points | Main findings | References |
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| Dehydration therapy | Thenuwara et al. | Mannitol, furosemide | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | It was administered intravenously after the baseline measurement of plasma osmolality. | The combination of furosemide with mannitol resulted in a more significant increase in plasma osmolality than seen with mannitol alone and a more significant decrease in brain water at 4 and 8 g/kg of mannitol. | [ |
| Schreibman et al. | Mannitol and hypertonic saline | Male Wistar rats | First, given 5 hours after ICH induction, then administered every 12 hours thereafter (4 doses total). | Increase in plasma osmolarity one hour after infusion. | [ | |
| Deng et al. | Albumin | Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats | Human serum albumin was administered intravenously one hour after ICH. | Improvement in short- and long-term neurobehavioral deficits. | [ | |
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| Inhibition of thrombin and RBC hemolysates | Han et al. | EP3R antagonist AE240 | Male C57BL/6 mice | Intraperitoneal injection 20 minutes and 6 hours after striatal thrombin injection and then twice daily for up to 72 hours. | EP3R inhibition mitigated the volume of thrombin-induced brain injury, brain edema, and neurologic deficits. | [ |
| Ye et al. | NA | NA | NA | Thrombin increased blood-brain barrier disruption and brain edema by mediating PAR (PAR-1, PAR-3, and PAR-4) and their downstream signaling. | [ | |
| Puech et al. | Dabigatran, rivaroxaban, apixaban, warfarin, and heparin | HBEC-5i human brain endothelial cells | Cells were incubated with or without dabigatran, rivaroxaban, apixaban, warfarin and heparin for 24 hours. The cells were then treated with or without thrombin to mimic a hemorrhagic event for one hour. | Dabigatran treatment allowed the tightness of the endothelial monolayer. | [ | |
| Wu et al. | 12-(3-Adamantan-1-yl-ureido)-dodecanoic acid (AUDA) | Mouse BV2 microglial and N2A cell lines and C57BL/6 mice. | BV2 microglia were incubated with LPS, thrombin, or hemin in the absence or presence of AUDA for 24 hours. | Reduction in thrombin- and hemin-induced microglial activation | [ | |
| Caliaperumal et al. | Bipyridine | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | ip, 20 mg/kg beginning 6 h post-ICH and then every 24 h for 2 days. | Posttreatment with bipyridine had no impact on nonheme parenchymal iron levels, behavioral impairments, or edema after collagenase-induced ICH. Bipyridine did not reduce tissue loss, cell death, or behavioral impairment in the whole-blood ICH model. | [ | |
| Warkentin et al. | Deferoxamine | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Intraperitoneal administration of DFX at 0 and 6 hours after ICH. | Treatment with DFX treatment does not influence brain edema or functional recovery after ICH. | [ | |
| Wu et al. | Deferoxamine (DFX) | C57BL/6 male mice | ip, 6 hours after ICH and then every 12 hours for three days. | DFX did not reduce the volume, edema, or swelling of brain injuries, but improved neurologic function in mice with ICH. | [ | |
| Li et al. | VK-28 and deferoxamine (DFX) | C57BL/6 mice | Intraperitoneal administration of VK-28 six hours after ICH and then every 12 hours for one, three, or seven consecutive days. | VK-28 polarized microglia to an M2-like phenotype, reduced brain water content, decreased white matter injury, improved neurologic function, and reduced overall death rate after ICH. | [ | |
| Wu et al. | 2,2′-Dipyridyl, a lipid-soluble ferrous iron chelator | Male C57BL/6 mice | ip, two hours before collagenase injection or six hours after collagenase or blood injection, and then once daily for 1 or 3 days. | Posttreatment with 2,2′-dipyridyl reduced the volume and edema of the brain injury and improved neurologic function. | [ | |
| Zhu et al. | Deferoxamine mesylate- (DFO-) loaded thermosensitive keratin hydrogels (TKG) | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | DFO loaded TKG-3 (20 | Reduction in ICH-induced iron deposits, brain nonheme iron content, brain edema, and ROS level. | [ | |
| Wang et al. | Monascin (a novel natural Nrf2 activator with PPAR | Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats | Intragastrical administration of monascin six hours after ICH and twice a day until the euthanasia point. | Alleviation in BBB permeability, edema, and volume of the hematoma. | [ | |
| Li et al. | IL-10 or CD36-deficient mice | C57BL/6 male mice, IL-10−/− mice, CD36−/− mice | IL-10 or CD36-deficient mice. | IL-10 accelerated hematoma clearance, alleviated brain water content, and promoted functional recovery as long as CD36 expression was intact. | [ | |
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| Inhibition or modulation of the inflammatory response | Lin et al. | Heme | C57BL/6, mice, TLR4−/− mice | Injection into the striatum. | TLR4−/− mice showed reduced cerebral edema and lower neurological deficit scores. | [ |
| Lai et al. | Verbascoside | Male C57BL/6 mice | Intraperitoneal injection of verbascoside at 15 minutes post-ICH. | Improvement in the behavioral score. | [ | |
| Wang et al. | TAK-242 | C57BL/6 male mice | Intraperitoneal administration of TAK-242 6 hours after ICH once daily for 5 days. | Reduction in brain water content, neurological deficit scores, and levels of inflammatory factors. | [ | |
| Masada et al. | Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Lateral ventricle injection of ten microliters of adenoviral suspension containing 1012 particles/mL immediately after ICH or thrombin injection. | Reduction of polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMNL) infiltration and brain water content. | [ | |
| Rynkowski et al. | C3aRA | Adult male C57BL/6J mice | Intraperitoneal administration of C3aRA 45 minutes before ICH or 6 and 12 hours after ICH, followed in both cohorts by doses twice daily for 72 hours. | Improvement in the neurologic outcome. | [ | |
| Garrett et al. | C5aRA and C3aRA | Adult male C57BL/6J mice | Intraperitoneal administration of C5aRA and C3aRA 6 and 12 hours after ICH, followed by doses twice daily for 72 hours. | Reduction in brain edema and alleviation of neurologic deficits. | [ | |
| Jing et al. | CD47 blocking antibody | Male and female C57BL/6 mice. | Injection of anti-CD47 antibody in 30 | Increase in hematoma/iron clearance by macrophages/microglia. | [ | |
| Rolland et al. | Fingolimod (FTY-720) | Eight-week-old CD-1 mice | Intraperitoneal administration of FTY720 one hour after ICH. | Reduction in brain edema. | [ | |
| Bobinger et al. | Siponimod (BAF-312) | Adult male C57BL/6 mice | Intraperitoneal administration of BAF-312 30 minutes, 24 hours, and 48 hours after ICH. | Siponimod (BAF-312) attenuated PHE after ICH, increased survival, and reduced ICH-induced sensorimotor deficits in the experimental ICH model. | [ | |
| Bobinger et al. | Siponimod | C57BL/6N mice | A single (30-minute post-ICH) or multiple (three times: 30 minutes, 24 and 48 hours post-ICH) siponimod administration. | Attenuation in the development of brain edema decreased in ICH-induced ventriculomegaly. | [ | |
| Xu et al. | CAY10444 (S1PR3 antagonist) | Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats | Administration at 6 hours after ICH and every 24 hours beginning on the second day after ICH. | Modulation of S1PR3 can maintain the integrity of BBB integrity by inhibiting the S1PR3/CCL2 axis after ICH. | [ | |
| Wang et al. | Minocycline | Adult male Sprague–Dawley rats | Intraperitoneal administration immediately and 12 hours after ICH, followed by twice a day for two days. | Improvement in the consequences of ICH by preserving the integrity of the BBB. | [ | |
| Yang et al. | Minocycline | Male piglets | Intramuscular administration 2 hours after ICH and every 12 hours for 3 days. | Reduction in ICH-induced brain swelling, fewer neurological deficits, and fewer white matter injuries. | [ | |
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| Other therapy | Kim et al. | Pioglitazone | C57 BL/6 mice | Intraperitoneal administration days 1, 3, and 6 after ICH. | Decrease in NLRP3-related brain edema. | [ |
| Wu et al. | Rosiglitazone | Male C57/BL mice | Intraperitoneal administration on days 1, 3, and 6 days after ICH. | Increase in PPAR | [ | |
| Guo et al. | Nicardipine hydrochloride entrapped in chitosan nanoparticles | Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats | Intranasal administration immediately following ICH. | Reduction in brain water content. | [ | |
| Gu et al. | Simvastatin | CD-1 mice | Intragastric administration once a day immediately following ICH. | Reduction in brain edema and cellular apoptosis. | [ | |
| Jiang et al. | Glibenclamide | Sprague-Dawley rats | Glibenclamide was administered intraperitoneally in a single loading dose (10 | Glibenclamide improved ICH-induced neuroinflammation and improved neurological outcomes in aged rats. | [ | |
| Kung et al. and Wilkinson et al. | Glibenclamide | Sprague-Dawley rats | Glibenclamide was administered intraperitoneally in a single loading dose (10 | Glibenclamide has no influence on hematoma volume, brain water content, and functional impairment in mice with ICH. | [ | |
| Wilkinson et al. | Bumetanide, a specific NKCC1 antagonist | Sprague-Dawley rats | Bumetanide ranged from 10 mg/kg to 40 mg/kg was administered orally at 2 hours or 7 days post-ICH. | Bumetanide did not consistently reduce edema, although there was some indication that it may have modest effects after ICH. | [ | |
| Li et al. | Neuroserpin | C57BL/6J male mice | Stereotactic injection into the shallow cortex of the hematoma immediately after ICH. | Reduction in brain edema and BBB permeability. | [ | |
| Zhang et al. | Adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (ADSC) | Sprague-Dawley rats | Stereotactic injection into the hemorrhagic brain 48 hours after ICH. | Alleviation in nervous tissue injury and reduction in cell apoptosis. | [ | |
| Cui et al. | rTMS | C57BL/6J male mice | rTMS was performed every 24 hours for 5 days. | Alleviation of brain edema and functional neural deficits. | [ | |
| Baker et al. | Therapeutic hypothermia | NA | The cooling strategies employed in the preclinical studies were highly diverse. | Most studies in ICH animals have shown a significant benefit in behavioral scores, cerebral edema, and the blood-brain barrier. Its usage warrants further exploration. | [ | |
Abbreviations: ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; PAR: protease activated receptors; BBB: blood-brain barrier; DOC: direct oral anticoagulants; S1PR3: sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 3; DKK-1: dickkopf1; TLR-4: Toll-like receptor 4; CCL2: monocyte chemotactic protein; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa-B; MyD88: myeloid differentiation factor88; TRIF: adaptor-inducing interferon-β; PPARγ: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ; AQP-4: aquaporin 4; NLRP3: nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptor family pyrin domain protein 3; rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
Clinical studies on potential therapeutic targets for PHE after ICH.
| Potential targets | Authors | Drugs/reagents/treatments | Samples | Time points | Main findings | References |
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| Dehydration therapy | Shoamanesh et al. | Hypertonic normal saline, mannitol, glycerin, fructose, and albumin | Multiple studies | Guidelines based on multiple studies in the acute phase of ICH | Currently, there is insufficient evidence for the routine or prophylactic use of hyperosmotic agents in ICH. | [ |
| Cook et al. | Different dehydrate agents | Multiple studies | Guidelines based on multiple studies in the acute phase of ICH | The use of corticosteroids to treat ICP in ICH can cause harm, has no proven benefits, and is therefore not recommended. | [ | |
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| Blood pressure control | Leasure et al. | Nicardipine | One thousand patients with primary ICH less than 60 mL and elevated systolic BP (>180 mm Hg) | Within 4.5 hours of onset (target SBP 110–139 mm Hg within 2 hours) or standard (target SBP 140–179 mm Hg within 2 hours) | Decrease in 24-hour PHER in deep ICH. | [ |
| Zang et al. | Urapidil | 121 patients | Within 6 hours | Reduction in rebleeding and PHE. | [ | |
| Zhang et al. | Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers | 635 patients | Preuse | Decrease in mortality, volume of perihematomal edema, and prevalence of ICH-associated pneumonia. | [ | |
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| Hemostasis | Jiang et al. | NA | NA | NA | Studies on the efficacy of hematoma expansion are currently controversial. | [ |
| Selim et al. | Deferoxamine mesylate (DFO) | 294 patients | DFO (32 mg/kg/day) or saline (placebo) was infused for 3 consecutive days within 24 hours after ICH | Although DFO treatment was safe, it did not change functional outcome on day 90 after ICH. | [ | |
| Wei et al. | Deferoxamine mesylate (DFO) | 294 patients | DFO (32 mg/kg/day) or saline (placebo) was infused for 3 consecutive days within 24 hours after ICH | In 114 patients with moderate volume of hematoma (10-30 mL), deferoxamine alleviated functional deficit on day 90 after ICH. | [ | |
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| Immunotherapies | Fu et al. | Fingolimod | 23 primary supratentorial ICH patients with a volume of hematoma of 5 to 30 mL | Oral administration of fingolimod in 72 hours 3 times | Reduction in PHE. | [ |
| Chang et al. | Minocycline | 20 patients | Minocycline was administered intravenously once a day, five days in total | No changes in clinical and radiological results. | [ | |
| Fouda et al. | Minocycline | 16 patients | Intravenous administration once followed by oral administration every 4 days | Did not influence inflammatory biomarkers, hematoma volume, or perihematomal edema. | [ | |
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| Surgical management | Zuo et al. | Gross-total removal of the hematoma | 176 patients with hypertensive basal ganglia hemorrhage | Within 3 hours | Decrease in the formation of perihematomal edema and secondary injury. | [ |
| Fung et al. | Decompressive craniectomy | 25 patients | 15 (4–69) hours | A noticeable increase in perihematomal edema. | [ | |
| Okuda et al. | Craniotomy or stereotactic hematoma evacuation | 16 patients | Within 24 hours of onset | Reduction of brain edema. | [ | |
| Horowitz et al. | Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) | 36 patients | Unavailable | Decrease in pericavity edema. | [ | |
| Lian et al. | Minimally invasive surgery+rt-PA | 43 patients | 6-72 hours after the onset of ICH | MIS reduced PHE volume. | [ | |
| Xia et al. | Minimally invasive craniopuncture with the hard- or soft-channel | 150 patients with hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage | Within 24 hours of onset | Minimally invasive soft-channel craniopuncture is more effective in treating HICH in alleviating cerebral edema, inhibiting oxidative stress, and inflammatory response. | [ | |
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| Other therapy | Naval et al. | Statins | 125 ICH patients | Prior statin exposure | The mean relative perihematomal edema was significantly lower in patients taking statins at presentation than in patients without prior statin use. | [ |
| Sprugel et al. | Statins | 1,275 ICH patients | Initiation of statins after ICH during the first days after ICH | The initiation of statins during the first days after ICH may increase PHE. However, statins should be initiated after that (e.g., at hospital discharge) to prevent cardiovascular events and potentially improve functional recovery. | [ | |
| Zhang et al. | Sulfonylureas | 27 patients with acute basal ganglia hemorrhage | Sulfonylurea pretreatment before the onset of ICH | The pretreatment of sulfonylureas significantly reduced both PHE volume and rPHE. | [ | |
| Corry et al. | Conivaptan | Seven patients | Administered every 12 hours for two days | Conivaptan can be administered safely to ICH patients. | [ | |
| Zhao et al. | Remote ischemic conditioning | 40 subjects with supratentorial ICH | Consecutive seven days after ICH | Improvement in the resolution rate of the hematoma and reduction in the relative PHE. | [ | |
| Baker et al. | Therapeutic hypothermia | Multiple studies | Systematic review and meta-analysis | It is currently difficult to determine the extent of the harm caused by post-ICH fever. The cooling strategies used in the clinical studies were highly diverse. Definitive randomized controlled studies are still required to answer the therapeutic effects of hypothermia on PHE in ICH patients. | [ | |
Abbreviations: ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; ICP: intracranial pressure; PHE: perihematomal edema; PHER: expansion rate of perihematomal edema expansion rate; BP: blood pressure; SBP: systolic blood pressure; MMP-9: matrix metallopeptidase-9; rt-PA: recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; HICH: hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage.
Figure 3The evolution of PHE and its potential therapeutic targets. Clot retraction, activation of thrombin in the coagulation cascade, and toxicity of RBC degradation products can contribute to PHE formation after acute ICH. Furthermore, abnormal electrolyte and water transport and thrombin and RBC lysis-induced inflammatory and oxidative stress responses are critical in the formation of PHE. PHE can be classified as ionic (cytotoxic) and vasogenic edema according to the mechanisms and imaging characteristics. Although various variables, including cerebral venous drainage and the glymphatic system, can affect the severity of PHE, more accurate methods for quantifying PHE should be developed. PHE can aggravate the severity of brain injury, but the relationship between PHE and functional outcomes after ICH was conflicting. Strategies to alleviate PHE warrant further exploration by targeting ICP, thrombin, lysis of the RBC, inflammation, controlling blood pressure, reducing hematoma volume, etc. Abbreviations: PHE: perihematomal edema; RBC: red blood cell; MMPs: matrix metallopeptidases; AQP4: aquaporin 4; BBB: blood-brain barrier; ICP: intracranial pressure.