Transient selective brain cooling confers neurovascular and functional protection from acute to chronic stages of ischemia/reperfusion brain injury

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Abstract

Ischemic injury can be alleviated by the judicious use of hypothermia. However, the optimal regimens and the temporal kinetics of post-stroke neurovascular responses to hypothermic intervention have not been systematically studied. These gaps slow the clinical translation of hypothermia as an anti-stroke therapy. Here, we characterized the effects of transient selective brain hypothermia (TSBH) from the hyperacute to chronic stages of focal ischemia/reperfusion brain injury induced by transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in mice. A simple cooling device was used to induce TSBH during cerebral ischemia. This treatment reduced mortality from 31.8% to 0% and improved neurological outcomes for at least 35 days post-injury. TSBH mitigated blood–brain barrier leakage during the hyperacute and acute injury stages (1–23 h post-reperfusion). This early protection of the blood–brain barrier was associated with anti-inflammatory phenotypic polarization of microglia/macrophages, reduced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, and less brain infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages during the subacute injury stage (three days post-reperfusion). TSBH elicited enduring protective effects on both grey and white matter for at least 35 days post-injury and preserved the long-term electrophysiological function of fiber tracts. In conclusion, TSBH ameliorates ischemia/reperfusion injury in the neurovascular unit from hyperacute to chronic injury stages after experimental stroke.

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Zhao, J., Mu, H., Liu, L., Jiang, X., Wu, D., Shi, Y., … Ji, X. (2019). Transient selective brain cooling confers neurovascular and functional protection from acute to chronic stages of ischemia/reperfusion brain injury. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 39(7), 1215–1231. https://doi.org/10.1177/0271678X18808174

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