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Intracerebral microdialysis of adenosine and adenosine monophosphate - a systematic review and meta-regression analysis of baseline concentrations

Authors :
Sergey A. Savelyev
Joanna IntHout
Cathalijn H. C. Leenaars
Rob B. M. de Vries
Stevie van der Mierden
Source :
Journal of Neurochemistry, 147, 1, pp. 58-70, Journal of Neurochemistry, 147, 58-70, Journal of Neurochemistry
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 200204.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Microdialysis is a method to study the extracellular space in vivo, based on the principle of diffusion. It can be used to measure various small molecules including the neuroregulator adenosine. Baseline levels of the compounds measured with microdialysis vary over studies. We systematically reviewed the literature to investigate the full range of reported baseline concentrations of adenosine and adenosine monophosphate in microdialysates. We performed a meta-regression analysis to study the influence of flow rate, probe membrane surface area, species, brain area and anaesthesia versus freely behaving, on the adenosine concentration. Baseline adenosine concentrations in microdialysates ranged from 0.8 to 2100 nM. There was limited evidence on baseline adenosine monophosphate concentrations in microdialysates. Across studies, we found effects of flow rate and anaesthesia versus freely behaving on dialysate adenosine concentrations (p /= 0.14). With increasing flow rate, adenosine concentrations decreased. With anaesthesia, adenosine concentrations increased. The effect of other predictor variables on baseline adenosine concentrations, for example, post-surgical recovery time, could not be analysed because of a lack of reported data. This study shows that meta-regression can be used as an alternative to new animal experiments to answer research questions in the field of neurochemistry. However, current levels of reporting of primary studies are insufficient to reach the full potential of this approach; 63 out of 133 studies could not be included in the analysis because of insufficient reporting, and several potentially relevant factors had to be excluded from the analyses. The level of reporting of experimental detail needs to improve.

Details

ISSN :
00223042
Volume :
147
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39692587e40d70809409e2c588b43549