Plasminogen activators contribute to impairment of hypercapnic and hypotensive cerebrovasodilation after cerebral hypoxia/ischemia in the newborn pig

30Citations
Citations of this article
22Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Background and Purpose - Babies are frequently exposed to hypoxia and ischemia during the perinatal period as a result of stroke or problems with delivery or respiratory management post delivery. The only U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved treatment for acute stroke is the administration of tPA. Nonetheless, basic science studies indicate that tPA exhibits both beneficial and deleterious effects on central nervous system function. Cerebral hypoxia/ischemia (H/I) impairs dilation to hypercapnia and hypotension in the newborn pig. We investigated the role of exogenous and endogenous plasminogen activators (PA) in piglet hypercapnic and hypotensive dilator impairment after H/I. Methods - Responses to dilator stimuli were measured in chloralose-anesthetized piglets equipped with a closed cranial window before and after hypoxia (PO2 35 mm Hg) and subsequent global cerebral ischemia. Data (n = 6) were analyzed by repeated-measures analysis of variance. Results - Hypercapnic (PCO2 75 mm Hg) and hypotensive (mean arterial blood pressure decreased by 45%) pial artery dilation (PAD) was blunted after H/I and reversed to vasoconstriction in animals pretreated with tPA or uPA (10-7 mol/L; 26 ± 2, 11 ± 1, and -4 ± 1% for hypercapnia before, after H/I, and after H/I with tPA). In animals pretreated with EEIIMD (10-7 mol/L), a peptide that binds uPA and tPA but does not affect proteolysis or soluble uPA receptor (suPAR, 10-7 mol/L), which binds but does not affect the proteolytic activity of uPA. PAD induced by hypercapnia and hypotension was attenuated to a lesser extent (25 ± 2 and 17 ± 1% for hypercapnic PAD before and after H/I in EEIIMD-pretreated animals and 21 ± 1 and 18 ± 2% in suPAR-pretreated animals). Conclusions - These data show that exogenous PA administration potentiates the impairment of hypercapnic and hypotensive PAD that occurs after H/I. Inhibition of endogenous PA may ameliorate the impairment of PAD induced by hypercapnia and hypotension PAD that develops after hypoxic central nervous system injury of diverse etiologies. © 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Armstead, W. M., Cines, D. B., & Higazi, A. A. R. (2005). Plasminogen activators contribute to impairment of hypercapnic and hypotensive cerebrovasodilation after cerebral hypoxia/ischemia in the newborn pig. Stroke, 36(10), 2265–2269. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.STR.0000181078.74698.b0

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free