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Endotoxin‐induced cerebral pathophysiology: differences between fetus and newborn
Author(s) -
Feng Susan Y. S.,
Hollis Jacob H.,
Samarasinghe Thilini,
Phillips David J.,
Rao Shripada,
Yu Victor Y. H.,
Walker Adrian M.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.13973
Subject(s) - pathophysiology , fetus , medicine , bioinformatics , pregnancy , biology , genetics
As the comparative pathophysiology of perinatal infection in the fetus and newborn is uncertain, this study contrasted the cerebral effects of endotoxemia in conscious fetal sheep and newborn lambs. Responses to intravenous bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS ) or normal saline were studied on three consecutive days in fetal sheep ( LPS 1  μ g/kg, n  = 5; normal saline n  = 5) and newborn lambs ( LPS 2  μ g/kg, n  = 10; normal saline n  = 5). Cerebro‐vascular function was assessed by monitoring cerebral blood flow ( CBF ) and cerebral vascular resistance ( CVR ) over 12 h each day, and inflammatory responses were assessed by plasma TNF alpha ( TNF ‐ α ), nitrate and nitrite concentrations. Brain injury was quantified by counting both resting and active macrophages in the caudate nucleus and periventricular white matter ( PVWM ). An acute cerebral vasoconstriction (within 1 h of LPS injection) occurred in both the fetus (Δ CVR +53%) and newborn (Δ CVR +63%); subsequently prolonged cerebral vasodilatation occurred in the fetus (Δ CVR −33%) in association with double plasma nitrate/nitrite concentrations, but not in the newborn. Abundant infiltration of activated macrophages was observed in both CN and PVWM at each age, with the extent being 2–3 times greater in the fetus ( P  < 0.001). In conclusion, while the fetus and newborn experience a similar acute disruption of the cerebral circulation after LPS , the fetus suffers a more prolonged circulatory disruption, a greater infiltration of activated macrophages, and an exaggerated susceptibility to brain injury.

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