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Mechanical ventilation triggers hippocampal apoptosis by vagal and dopaminergic pathways

Authors :
Adrián González-López
Konrad Talbot
Guillermo M. Albaiceta
Aurora Astudillo
Alina Aguirre
Inés López-Alonso
Cristina Tomás-Zapico
Claudia C. dos Santos
Antonio Fueyo
Laura Amado-Rodríguez
Estefanía Batalla-Solís
Source :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine. 188(6)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Critically ill patients frequently develop neuropsychological disturbances including acute delirium or memory impairment. The need for mechanical ventilation is a risk factor for these adverse events, but a mechanism that links lung stretch and brain injury has not been identified.To identify the mechanisms that lead to brain dysfunction during mechanical ventilation.Brains from mechanically ventilated mice were harvested, and signals of apoptosis and alterations in the Akt survival pathway were studied. These measurements were repeated in vagotomized or haloperidol-treated mice, and in animals intracerebroventricularly injected with selective dopamine-receptor blockers. Hippocampal slices were cultured and treated with micromolar concentrations of dopamine, with or without dopamine receptor blockers. Last, levels of dysbindin, a regulator of the membrane availability of dopamine receptors, were assessed in the experimental model and in brain samples from ventilated patients.Mechanical ventilation triggers hippocampal apoptosis as a result of type 2 dopamine receptor activation in response to vagal signaling. Activation of these receptors blocks the Akt/GSK3β prosurvival pathway and activates the apoptotic cascade, as demonstrated in vivo and in vitro. Vagotomy, systemic haloperidol, or intracerebroventricular raclopride (a type 2 dopamine receptor blocker) ameliorated this effect. Moreover, ventilation induced a concomitant change in the expression of dysbindin-1C. These results were confirmed in brain samples from ventilated patients.These results prove the existence of a pathogenic mechanism of lung stretch-induced hippocampal apoptosis that could explain the neurological changes in ventilated patients and may help to identify novel therapeutic approaches.

Details

ISSN :
15354970
Volume :
188
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....96d734249a0cfdfd36b4fd35189c7a4c