Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces a pathophysiologic state that can be worsened by secondary injury. Monitoring brain metabolism with intracranial microdialysis can provide clinical insights to limit secondary injury in the days following TBI. Recent enhancements to microdialysis include the implementation of continuously operating electrochemical biosensors for monitoring the dialysate sample stream in real time and dexamethasone retrodialysis to mitigate the tissue response to probe insertion. Dexamethasone-enhanced continuous-online microdialysis (Dex-enhanced coMD) records long-lasting declines of glucose after controlled cortical impact in rats and TBI in patients. The present study employed retrodialysis and fluorescence microscopy to investigate the mechanism responsible for the decline of dialysate glucose after injury of the rat cortex. Findings confirm the long-term functionality of Dex-enhanced coMD for monitoring brain glucose after injury, demonstrate that intracranial glucose microdialysis is coupled to glucose utilization in the tissues surrounding the probes, and validate the conclusion that aberrant glucose utilization drives the postinjury glucose decline.
CITATION STYLE
Gifford, E. K., Robbins, E. M., Jaquins-Gerstl, A., Rerick, M. T., Nwachuku, E. L., Weber, S. G., … Michael, A. C. (2021). Validation of Dexamethasone-Enhanced Continuous-Online Microdialysis for Monitoring Glucose for 10 Days after Brain Injury. ACS Chemical Neuroscience, 12(19), 3588–3597. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschemneuro.1c00231
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