Literature DB >> 7790257

Blood-spinal cord barrier function and morphometry after single doses of x-rays in rat spinal cord.

P A Stewart1, H V Vinters, C S Wong.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The effects of irradiation on blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB) function and ultrastructure were evaluated using a rat spinal cord model. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Rats received a single dose of 25 Gy to the cervical spinal cord (C2-T2). At various times following irradiation and before the onset of paralysis, BSCB function was assessed using horseradish peroxidase (HRP) as a vascular tracer, and barrier-related structural changes in the capillaries were evaluated using morphometric techniques.
RESULTS: Focal extravasation of HRP was seen at 93 days after irradiation, and extensive extravasation was apparent by 114 days in white matter, but not in gray matter. At 93 days, pathologic changes apparent by light microscopy were very minor in the white matter of the irradiated segment. By 107 days, myelin beading, Wallerian degeneration, edema, and histiocytes were apparent in white matter, and these features became increasingly prominent over the following weeks. No noteworthy changes were seen in gray matter at these times. Electron microscopic examination showed that, during the first 93 days following irradiation, more than half of the endothelial cells in white matter had disappeared (p < 0.05). In terms of the putative vascular pores, no abnormalities in endothelial junctions (the presumed small pore) were found, but there was an increase in the density of endothelial vesicles (a putative form of the large pore) in irradiated white matter (p < 0.001), but not in gray matter. Pericytes, thought to act as a second line of defence in the blood-brain barrier, increased in size but not in number in the irradiated white matter of the spinal cord.
CONCLUSION: We suggest that radiation damage to endothelial cells, which form the BSCB prior to the onset of neurological deficit, may play an important role in the pathogenesis of white matter necrosis.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7790257     DOI: 10.1016/0360-3016(94)00594-B

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys        ISSN: 0360-3016            Impact factor:   7.038


  9 in total

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Review 5.  Pathobiology of radiation myelopathy and strategies to mitigate injury.

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6.  Upregulation of VEGF and FGF2 in normal rat brain after experimental intraoperative radiation therapy.

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7.  Sensitization of Endothelial Cells to Ionizing Radiation Exacerbates Delayed Radiation Myelopathy in Mice.

Authors:  Chang-Lung Lee; Ato O Wright; Jessica W Lee; Jeremy Brownstein; Stephanie Hasapis; Sloane Satow; Lorraine Da Silva Campos; Nerissa Williams; Yan Ma; Lixia Luo; Timothy Johnson; Andrea R Daniel; William T Harrison; Mark Oldham; David G Kirsch
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8.  In vivo experimental evidence that the nitric oxide pathway is involved in the X-ray-induced antiangiogenicity.

Authors:  O Hatjikondi; P Ravazoula; D Kardamakis; J Dimopoulos; S Papaioannou
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9.  Alterations in the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor in the rat brain following gamma knife surgery.

Authors:  Lei Cheng; Lin Ma; Hecheng Ren; Hongwei Zhao; Yiqiang Pang; Yongheng Wang; Ming Wei
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2014-08-27       Impact factor: 2.952

  9 in total

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