Literature DB >> 9427475

The vulnerability of the fetal sheep brain to hypoxemia at mid-gestation.

S Rees1, M Stringer, Y Just, S B Hooper, R Harding.   

Abstract

Our aim was to test the hypothesis that a brief episode of hypoxemia near mid-gestation in fetal sheep will result in damage to the fetal brain with the extent and type of damage in any particular region being related to the developmental processes occurring at the time of the insult. Hypoxemia was induced, sufficient to reduce arterial O2 content by approximately 50%, by restricting utero-placental blood flow in 14 chronically catheterised fetuses for 6 h or 12 h at 84 days of gestation (term 145-8 days). Age-matched fetuses (n = 14; 4 operated and 10 unoperated) were used as controls. Fetuses were killed 7 days after being exposed to hypoxemia, and brains removed for histological analysis at the light and ultrastructural levels. Body weights of hypoxemic fetuses did not differ significantly from controls but brain weights were significantly reduced both in absolute terms and when expressed in relation to body weight (P < 0.05). Most fetuses exposed to hypoxemia sustained no gross brain damage. However, in one hypoxemic fetus from a multiple pregnancy there was extensive leucomalacia in the cortical white matter; mild focal damage was seen in another 8 hypoxemic fetuses. In the cerebral cortex (frontal lobe) the surface folding index was significantly reduced (P < 0.05) in hypoxemic fetuses compared to controls suggesting that gyral formation had been delayed. In these fetuses there were also degenerating neurons in the deeper cortical layers. In the hippocampus of hypoxemic fetuses there was a delay (P < 0.05), compared to controls, in the migration of cells from the germinal layer to the pyramidal layer in the CA1 region, and decreases (P < 0.05) in the density (area1) of neurons in the pyramidal layer and in the width of stratum oriens. In the cerebellum of hypoxemic fetuses there was a decrease (P < 0.05), compared to controls, in the density (area1) of mitotic bodies in the external granule cell layer. However, there were no significant differences in the number of pyknotic cells in this layer, in the density of Purkinje cells, in their somal area, or in the width of the external granule cell or molecular layers. There was an increase (P < 0.05) in the proportion of the brain parenchyma occupied by blood vessels in both the hippocampus and cortex of hypoxemic fetuses compared to controls. This study has shown that an hypoxemic insult near mid-gestation can result, one week later, in white matter damage and in neuronal death in the hippocampus and to a lesser extent in the cerebral cortex and cerebellum. It can also retard neuronal migration and the growth of neural processes in the hippocampus where development is well established at this age. Such brain damage could result in less than optimal neuronal connectivity and could affect function postnatally.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9427475     DOI: 10.1016/s0165-3806(97)81787-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res Dev Brain Res        ISSN: 0165-3806


  37 in total

1.  Chronic fetal hypoxia produces selective brain injury associated with altered nitric oxide synthases.

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2.  The effects of postnatal estrogen therapy on brain development in preterm baboons.

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Review 3.  Pathophysiology of glia in perinatal white matter injury.

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4.  Reduced cortical folding in mental retardation.

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Review 5.  Development of the cerebral cortex and the effect of the intrauterine environment.

Authors:  Sebastian Quezada; Margie Castillo-Melendez; David W Walker; Mary Tolcos
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Review 6.  Injury of the developing cerebellum: a brief review of the effects of endotoxin and asphyxial challenges in the late gestation sheep fetus.

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Review 8.  Cerebral white and gray matter injury in newborns: new insights into pathophysiology and management.

Authors:  Stephen A Back
Journal:  Clin Perinatol       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 3.430

9.  Characterization of brain development in the ferret via MRI.

Authors:  Alan R Barnette; Jeffery J Neil; Christopher D Kroenke; Jennifer L Griffith; Adrian A Epstein; Philip V Bayly; Andrew K Knutsen; Terrie E Inder
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10.  Developmental and neuropathological consequences of ductal ligation in the preterm baboon.

Authors:  Michelle Loeliger; Terrie E Inder; Penelope A Dalitz; Sarah Cain; Emily J Camm; Bradley Yoder; Donald McCurnin; Phillip W Shaul; Ronald Clyman; Sandra M Rees
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 3.756

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