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Propofol Impairs Neurogenesis and Neurologic Recovery and Increases Mortality Rate in Adult Rats After Traumatic Brain Injury*

Authors :
Florian Wilde
Philipp Merk
Irina Staib-Lasarzik
Frederik Johnson
Ralph Timaru-Kast
Katrin Frauenknecht
Christian Werner
Anne Sebastiani
Serge C. Thal
Kristin Engelhard
Clemens Sommer
Source :
Critical Care Medicine. 42:129-141
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Objective: Limited data are available on the influence of sedation for critical care therapy with the widely used anesthetic propofol on recovery from acute traumatic brain injury. To establish the influence of propofol on endogenous neurogenesis and functional recovery after traumatic brain injury, rats were sedated with propofol either during or 2 hours after experimental traumatic brain injury. Design: Randomized controlled animal study. Setting: University research laboratory. Subjects: One hundred sixteen male Sprague Dawley rats. Interventions: Mechanical brain lesion by controlled cortical impact. Measurements and Main Results: This study investigated the dose-dependent influence of propofol (36 or 72 mg/kg/hr) either during controlled cortical impact induction or in a delayed application protocol 2 hours after experimental traumatic brain injury. Infusion of propofol resulted in 1) aggravation of neurologic dysfunction, 2) increased 28-day mortality rate, and 3) impaired posttraumatic neurogenesis (5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine + NeuN-positive cells). Application of propofol during trauma induction afforded a significant stronger effect in the high-dose group compared with low-dose propofol. In the posttrauma protocol, animals were sedated with sevoflurane during the controlled cortical impact injury, and propofol was given after an awake phase. In these animals, propofol increased mortality rate and impaired neurologic function and neurogenesis compared with animals without delayed propofol anesthesia. Conclusions: The results show that propofol may prevent or limit reparative processes in the early-phase postinjury. The results therefore indicate that anesthetics may be potentially harmful not only in very young mammalians but also in adult animals following acute cerebral injuries. The results provide first evidence for an altered sensitivity for anesthesia-related negative effects on neurogenesis, functional outcome, and survival in adult rats with brain lesions.

Details

ISSN :
00903493
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5fc8c9fb01c8fcabfb48b8ab7294f7a1