Neurophysiology
Research Laboratory Research Summaries
ISCHEMIA STUDIES
(a) Middle cerebral artery occlusion
(MCAO) stroke (ischemia) model in the rabbit. This model is being used by Dr.
Ogilvy to test purified, polymerized hemoglobin from Biopure as a means of achieving
neuroprotection by reducing infarct volume. Recently acquired data will be presented
at the upcoming annual Society for Neuroscience meeting in November (Soc Neurosci.
Abstr. 20, p.180). (b) The model will
also be used to test the strategy that reducing energy requirements of neuronal
tissue may be neuroprotective during periods of poor energy supply, e.g. during
planned ischemia in some neurosurgical procedures (e.g. clipping aneurysms, arteriovenous
malformations), and following ischemic episodes (e.g. stroke).
(c) In order to test this hypothesis, Dr. Ames has developed a "cocktail"
of agents which temporarily block energy demanding metabolic processes. In a manuscript
recently submitted to the Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, Drs.
Ames and Maynard showed that this "cocktail" was able to functionally
(light-evoked compound action potentials from the optic nerve were recorded) protect
the in vitro rabbit retina preparation, developed by Dr. Ames, during periods
of 3 h of ischemia. Future efforts involve
refinement of the cocktail to include more clinically useful agents, i.e. agents
which cross the blood brain barrier, yet have the same effect in both the in vitro
and in vivo preparations. Cardiovascular toxicity of such a cocktail is also to
be tested in vivo in rats and rabbits.
(d) Drs. Ogilvy and Maynard have recently started a multidepartmental study to
develop a baboon model of focal ischemia. Using intra-arterial balloon occlusion
of the middle cerebral artery for 3 h, followed by 1 h of reperfusion, this model
will combine and compare functional CT scanning to measure the cerebral volume
at risk from the 3 h MCAO, and diffusion weighted imaging MRI measurement of the
actual infarct volume in the baboon brain ex vivo. Traditional histological staining
of the cerebral infarct will also be assessed for microscopic analysis. A recently
developed anti-selectin monoclonal antiserum (Boehringer Ingelheim) will be used
to assess its potential as a neuroprotective agent in these on-going pilot experiments.
RETINAL PHYSIOLOGY
Using the in vitro rabbit retina
preparation previously mentioned, Drs. Maynard, Ames and Ogilvy are also examining
the involvement of nitric oxide (NO) in retinal (neuronal) function and in ischemia.
Staining for both the enzyme required for synthesis of the putative neurotransmitter,
NO synthase, and a crucial cofactor, B-Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate
(NADPH) have been localised in the mammalian retina. In addition, a variety of
single cell physiological recording experiments have implicated the involvement
of NO in retinal neurotransmission. The preparation used in our laboratory, developed
by Dr. Ames, is to our knowledge based on literature searches, the only existing
preparation from which both the electroretinogram and compound action potentials
from the optic nerve of an intact mammalian retina are physiologically recorded
simultaneously. Our initial results were communicated at a satellite symposium
on "Nitric oxide in the nervous system", July 1994, Montreal (Neuropharmacology,
In Press), and more recent data will be presented at the upcoming annual Society
for Neuroscience conference (Soc. Neurosci. Abstr. 20, p.218). A full manuscript
has been submitted for publication in Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science.
These experiments will proceed to examine the physiological consequences of manipulating
the activity of NO synthase during ischemia, since the literature to date is unclear
as to whether increases or decreases in NO are neuroprotective during stroke.
HUMAN CEREBRAL
VASCULATURE Although much is known
about the types of perivascular nerves and their origin in the cerebrovasculature
through immunohistochemical studies on animals, very little has been reported
on human cerebral vessels. Drs. Maynard and Ogilvy have therefore begun investigations
to try to characterise the innvervation of the human cerebrovasculature, and to
examine the innervation in abnormal cerebral vessels excised during surgical procedures.
Recent findings were communicated at the American Heart Association Stroke conference
in February 1994 (Stroke 25, 268) and a full paper is accepted for publication
in Journal of Neurosurgery. This report identifies the presence and density of
innvervation of calcitonin gene-related peptide (sensory), vasoactive intestinal
polypeptide (parasympathetic) and neuropeptide Y (sympathetic) in major human
cerebral and cerebellar arteries, and their absence in arteriovenous malformations.
Future studies will include confirming the assumed characterisation (based on
animal studies these peptide are characterised according to the nerve-types in
parentheses above), using chemical denervation techniques. In addition, other
abnormal vessels excised from surgery will continue to be assessed for the presence/absence
of innervation, which may provide some insight as to the control of blood flow
in these pathological cases. COLLABORATIVE
PROJECTS Dr. C. S. Ogilvy has a number
of clinical research projects ongoing with other members of the Neurosurgical
Service. Dr. K. I. Maynard also has ongoing collaborations with Dr. Michael A.
Moskowitz of the Neurology Service related to migraine research (see Rebeck, Maynard,
Hyman and Moskowitz, 1994, Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. 91, 3666-3669), and also in association
with Drs. M. Fisher and P. Huang, investigations examining possible compensatory
mechanisms of the cerebrovascular innervation in NO synthase (gene) knock-out
mice. |