A New Perspective on Stroke Research: Unraveling the Role of Brain Oxygen Dynamics in Stroke Pathophysiology.

IF 7 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Aging and Disease Pub Date : 2024-08-15 DOI:10.14336/AD.2024.0548
Hongmei Zhou, Jialing Wang, Zhipeng Zhu, Li Hu, Erdan An, Jian Lu, Heng Zhao
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Abstract

Stroke, a leading cause of death and disability, often results from ischemic events that cut off the brain blood flow, leading to neuron death. Despite treatment advancements, survivors frequently endure lasting impairments. A key focus is the ischemic penumbra, the area around the stroke that could potentially recover with prompt oxygenation; yet its monitoring is complex. Recent progress in bioluminescence-based oxygen sensing, particularly through the Green enhanced Nano-lantern (GeNL), offers unprecedented views of oxygen fluctuations in vivo. Utilized in awake mice, GeNL has uncovered hypoxic pockets within the cerebral cortex, revealing the brain's oxygen environment as a dynamic landscape influenced by physiological states and behaviors like locomotion and wakefulness. These findings illuminate the complexity of oxygen dynamics and suggest the potential impact of hypoxic pockets on ischemic injury and recovery, challenging existing paradigms and highlighting the importance of microenvironmental oxygen control in stroke resilience. This review examines the implications of these novel findings for stroke research, emphasizing the criticality of understanding pre-existing oxygen dynamics for addressing brain ischemia. The presence of hypoxic pockets in non-stroke conditions indicates a more intricate hypoxic scenario in ischemic brains, suggesting strategies to alleviate hypoxia could lead to more effective treatments and rehabilitation. By bridging gaps in our knowledge, especially concerning microenvironmental changes post-stroke, and leveraging new technologies like GeNL, we can pave the way for therapeutic innovations that significantly enhance outcomes for stroke survivors, promising a future where an understanding of cerebral oxygenation dynamics profoundly informs stroke therapy.

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中风研究的新视角:揭示脑氧动力学在中风病理生理学中的作用。
中风是导致死亡和残疾的主要原因之一,通常是由于缺血性事件切断了脑部血流,导致神经元死亡。尽管治疗手段不断进步,但幸存者仍经常会遭受持久的损伤。缺血半影是中风周围区域的一个关键重点,该区域在及时供氧的情况下有可能恢复;然而,对该区域的监测非常复杂。基于生物发光的氧传感技术取得了最新进展,特别是通过绿色增强型纳米灯(GeNL),可以对体内的氧波动进行前所未有的观察。利用清醒小鼠,GeNL 发现了大脑皮层内的缺氧区,揭示了大脑的氧环境是一个受生理状态和行为(如运动和清醒)影响的动态景观。这些发现揭示了氧动态的复杂性,并提出了缺氧袋对缺血性损伤和恢复的潜在影响,对现有范式提出了挑战,并强调了微环境氧控制在中风恢复中的重要性。本综述探讨了这些新发现对脑卒中研究的影响,强调了了解原有氧动态对解决脑缺血问题的重要性。非中风状态下缺氧袋的存在表明缺血大脑中的缺氧情况更为复杂,这表明缓解缺氧的策略可带来更有效的治疗和康复。通过弥合我们的知识差距,尤其是有关中风后微环境变化的知识差距,并利用 GeNL 等新技术,我们可以为治疗创新铺平道路,从而显著提高中风幸存者的预后。
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来源期刊
Aging and Disease
Aging and Disease GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
14.60
自引率
2.70%
发文量
138
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Aging & Disease (A&D) is an open-access online journal dedicated to publishing groundbreaking research on the biology of aging, the pathophysiology of age-related diseases, and innovative therapies for conditions affecting the elderly. The scope encompasses various diseases such as Stroke, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson’s disease, Epilepsy, Dementia, Depression, Cardiovascular Disease, Cancer, Arthritis, Cataract, Osteoporosis, Diabetes, and Hypertension. The journal welcomes studies involving animal models as well as human tissues or cells.
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