Micro-blood-brain barrier openings and cytotoxic fragments of amyloid precursor protein accumulation in white matter after ischemic brain injury in long-lived rats

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Abstract

Our study demonstrates that ischemia-reperfusion brain injury induces an increase in blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability in the periventricular white matter. This chronic insufficiency of BBB may allow entry of neurotoxic fragments of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and other blood components such as platelets into the perineurovascular white matter tissue. These components may have secondary and chronic harmful effects on the ischemic myelin and axons and can intensify the phagocytic activity of microglial cells. Pathological accumulation of toxic fragments of APP in myelinated axons and oligodendrocytes appears after ischemic BBB injury and seem to be concomitant with, but independent of neuronal injury. It seems that ischemia-reperfusion disturbances may play important roles, both directly and indirectly, in the pathogenesis of white matter lesions. This pathology appears to have distribution similar to that of sporadic Alzheimer's disease. We noted micro-BBB openings in ischemic white matter lesions that probably would act as seeds of future Alzheimer's-type pathology. © 2006 Springer-Verlag.

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APA

Pluta, R., Ułamek, M., & Januszewski, S. (2006). Micro-blood-brain barrier openings and cytotoxic fragments of amyloid precursor protein accumulation in white matter after ischemic brain injury in long-lived rats. Acta Neurochirurgica, Supplementum, (96), 267–271. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-30714-1_57

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