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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Diabetologia 30 (1987), S. 409-413 
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Experimental streptozotocin-diabetes ; blood-brain barrier permeability ; cations ; arterial integral uptake technique
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Decreased sodium permeability across the blood-brain barrier occurs in streptozotocin-treated rats after 2 weeks of diabetes. To establish whether this is a phenomenon specific for cations, the blood-brain barrier permeability for sodium, potassium and calcium was studied with an arterial integral uptake technique. Experiments were performed in control rats and, after two weeks after diabetes induction, in untreated streptozotocin-diabetic rats and in insulin-treated streptozotocin rats. In untreated diabetes, the neocortical blood-brain barrier permeability for sodium decreased by 35% (5.2±1.7 vs 3.4±1.1 10−5cm3·s−1·g−1) and potassium permeability by 39% (19.8±5.7 vs 12.1±3.9 10−5·cm3·s−1· g−1), whereas no differences in calcium permeability occurred. Insulin treatment was associated with an increase in the blood-brain barrier permeability to sodium (4.8±1.0 10−5·cm3·s−1·g−1) as compared to untreated diabetes (3.4±1.1 10−5·cm3·s−1·g−1). It is concluded that the observed changes in sodium and potassium permeability cannot be caused by electrostatic membrane changes. More specific abnormalities of the transport of sodium and potassium across the blood-brain barrier are likely to occur; disturbances in the sodium-potassium-pump activity could account for such alterations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0942-0940
    Keywords: Experimental subarachnoid haemorrhage ; cerebral autoregulation ; cerebral blood flow ; cerebral vasospasm
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Haemodynamic instability is of great importance in clinical management of patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). The significance of angiographically demonstrable vasospasm for disturbances of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral autoregulation has not yet been clarified. The present study was designed to describe disturbances of cerebral autoregulation during the timecourse of experimental SAH (eSAH) in rats. A second aim of the study was to relate the results to a reported timecourse of angiographic vasospasm in the same animal model. Previous studies have shown that the timecourse of angiographically visible vasospasm in eSAH is biphasic with maximal spasm at 10 min and 2 days after induction of eSAH. At 5 days, the vasospasms have resolved. CBF was measured using a133-Xenon intracarotid injection method which allowed serial measurements of mean hemispheric CBF during controlled manipulations of arterial blood pressure. In this way, an autoregulation curve could be constructed. The present study shows that autoregulation is severely disturbed or even totally absent at 2 and 5 days after eSAH. Thus there seems to be no direct correlation between presence of angiographic vasospasm and impairment of autoregulation, or that the impairment of autoregulation is more protracted than the presence of cerebral vasospasm, presuming a correlation exist.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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