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1.
J Neurosurg Anesthesiol ; 34(4): 429-436, 2022 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34127616

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Volatile anesthetic exposure during development leads to long-term cognitive deficits in rats which are dependent on age and sex. Female rats are protected relative to male rats for the same exposure on postnatal day 7. Here we test our hypothesis that androgens can modulate chloride cotransporter expression to alter the susceptibility to neurotoxicity from GABAergic drugs using female rats with exogenous testosterone exposure. METHODS: Female rats were injected with testosterone (100 µg/animal) or vehicle on postnatal days 1 to 6. On postnatal day 7, the animals were randomized to either isoflurane exposure or sham. Spatial memory was assessed with the Barnes maze starting on postnatal day 41. Western blots were run from testosterone treated postnatal day 7 animals to measure levels of chloride cotransporters sodium-potassium-chloride symporter (NKCC1) and chloride-potassium symporter 5 (KCC2). RESULTS: Exogenous testosterone modulated isoflurane anesthetic neurotoxicity in female rats based on poor performance in the probe trial of the Barnes Maze. By contrast, females with vehicle and isoflurane exposure were able to differentiate the goal position. These behavioral differences corresponded to differences in the protein levels of NKCC1 and KCC2 after exogenous testosterone exposure, with NKCC1 increasing ( P <0.001) and KCC2 decreasing ( P =0.003) relative to female controls. CONCLUSIONS: The expression of chloride cotransporters, NKCC1 and KCC2, is altered by testosterone in female rats and corresponds to a cognitive deficit after isoflurane exposure. This confirms the role of androgens in perinatal anesthetic neurotoxicity and supports our hypothesis that the developing GABAergic system plays a critical role in the underlying mechanism.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics , Isoflurane , Symporters , Animals , Female , Male , Pregnancy , Rats , Androgens , Animals, Newborn , Chlorides , Isoflurane/toxicity , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Solute Carrier Family 12, Member 2/metabolism , Symporters/metabolism , Testosterone
2.
J Neurosurg Anesthesiol ; 33(3): 273-280, 2021 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31503065

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Preclinical investigations of the effects of general anesthesia on the young brain show differences in vulnerability of males and females to anesthetic exposure at different times during development. However, the mechanism underlying this sex difference is poorly understood. Perinatal testosterone is the primary determinant of sexual differentiation and likely plays an important role in defining the period of susceptibility to anesthetic injury. We investigated whether the removal of testosterone through gonadectomy shortly after birth would improve cognitive outcomes in male rodents after early anesthesia exposure. METHODS: Male Sprague Dawley rats underwent gonadectomy at postnatal day 2 (P2), followed by exposure to 6 hours of isoflurane at P7. A control cohort of gonad-intact male littermates was simultaneously exposed. All rats were subjected to a series of object recognition and association tasks beginning at P42. Cell death in the thalamus and hippocampus was assessed in a separate cohort. RESULTS: All groups performed similarly on the Novel Object Recognition task; however, the gonad-intact isoflurane group exhibited decreased performance in the more difficult tasks. This deficit was ameliorated in the gonadectomized group. Cell death was similar between both isoflurane-exposed groups, regardless of gonadectomy. CONCLUSIONS: The absence of testosterone does not block cell death after anesthesia in specific brain regions of interest; however, does provide some neuroprotection as evidenced by the improved cognitive test performance during adulthood. These findings suggest that testosterone may be mechanistically involved in the sex-specific effects of anesthetic injury on the developing brain by extending the vulnerable period in male rats.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia , Anesthetics , Isoflurane , Animals , Female , Hippocampus , Isoflurane/adverse effects , Male , Pregnancy , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
3.
Anesthesiology ; 133(4): 852-866, 2020 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32930727

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cognitive deficits after perinatal anesthetic exposure are well established outcomes in animal models. This vulnerability is sex-dependent and associated with expression levels of the chloride transporters NKCC1 and KCC2. The hypothesis was that androgen signaling, NKCC1 function, and the age of isoflurane exposure are critical for the manifestation of anesthetic neurotoxicity in male rats. METHODS: Flutamide, an androgen receptor antagonist, was administered to male rats on postnatal days 2, 4, and 6 before 6 h of isoflurane on postnatal day 7 (ntotal = 26). Spatial and recognition memory were subsequently tested in adulthood. NKCC1 and KCC2 protein levels were measured from cortical lysates by Western blot on postnatal day 7 (ntotal = 20). Bumetanide, an NKCC1 antagonist, was injected immediately before isoflurane exposure (postnatal day 7) to study the effect of NKCC1 inhibition (ntotal = 48). To determine whether male rats remain vulnerable to anesthetic neurotoxicity as juveniles, postnatal day 14 animals were exposed to isoflurane and assessed as adults (ntotal = 30). RESULTS: Flutamide-treated male rats exposed to isoflurane successfully navigated the spatial (Barnes maze probe trial F[1, 151] = 78; P < 0.001; mean goal exploration ± SD, 6.4 ± 3.9 s) and recognition memory tasks (mean discrimination index ± SD, 0.09 ± 0.14; P = 0.003), unlike isoflurane-exposed controls. Flutamide changed expression patterns of NKCC1 (mean density ± SD: control, 1.49 ± 0.69; flutamide, 0.47 ± 0.11; P < 0.001) and KCC2 (median density [25th percentile, 75th percentile]: control, 0.23 [0.13, 0.49]; flutamide, 1.47 [1.18,1.62]; P < 0.001). Inhibiting NKCC1 with bumetanide was protective for spatial memory (probe trial F[1, 162] = 6.6; P = 0.011; mean goal time, 4.6 [7.4] s). Delaying isoflurane exposure until postnatal day 14 in males preserved spatial memory (probe trial F[1, 140] = 28; P < 0.001; mean goal time, 6.1 [7.0] s). CONCLUSIONS: Vulnerability to isoflurane neurotoxicity is abolished by blocking the androgen receptor, disrupting the function of NKCC1, or delaying the time of exposure to at least 2 weeks of age in male rats. These results support a dynamic role for androgens and chloride transporter proteins in perinatal anesthetic neurotoxicity.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Inhalation/toxicity , Isoflurane/toxicity , Receptors, Androgen/physiology , Solute Carrier Family 12, Member 2/physiology , Age Factors , Androgen Receptor Antagonists/pharmacology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Female , Male , Maze Learning/drug effects , Maze Learning/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Sex Factors
4.
Anesth Analg ; 129(5): 1365-1373, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31517674

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Early life anesthesia exposure results in long-term cognitive deficits in rats. Environmental enrichment consisting of social housing, a stimulating environment, and voluntary exercise can rescue this deficit. We hypothesized that exercise alone is sufficient to rescue the cognitive deficit associated with perinatal anesthesia. METHODS: Postnatal day 7 male rats (P7) underwent isoflurane (Iso) or sham exposure and were subsequently weaned at P21. They were then singly housed in a cage with a running wheel or a fixed wheel. After 3 weeks of exercise, animals underwent behavioral testing for spatial and recognition memory assessments. Animals were killed at various time points to accomplish either bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling or quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) to quantify brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) levels. RESULTS: Postweaning voluntary exercise rescued the long-term spatial memory deficit associated with perinatal Iso exposure. Iso-sedentary animals did not discriminate the goal quadrant, spending no more time than chance during the Barnes maze probe trial (1-sample t test, P = .524) while all other groups did (1-sample t test, PIso-exercise = .033; Pcontrol [Con]-sedentary = .004). We did not find a deficit in recognition memory tasks after Iso exposure as we observed previously. BrdU incorporation in the adult hippocampus of Iso-sedentary animals was decreased compared to sedentary controls (Tukey P = .005). Exercise prevented this decrease, with Iso-exercise animals having more proliferation than Iso-sedentary (Tukey P < .001). There was no effect of exercise or Iso on BDNF mRNA in either the cortex or hippocampus (cortex: FExercise[1,32] = 0.236, P = .631; FIso [1,32] = 0.038, P = .847; FInteraction [1,32] = 1.543, P = .223; and hippocampus: FExercise[1,33] = 1.186, P = .284; FIso [1,33] = 1.46, P = .236; FInteraction[1,33] = 1.78, P = .191). CONCLUSIONS: Exercise restores BrdU incorporation and rescues a spatial memory deficit after early life anesthesia exposure. This demonstrates sufficiency of exercise alone in the context of environmental enrichment to recover a behavioral phenotype after a perinatal insult.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Inhalation/toxicity , Isoflurane/toxicity , Memory Disorders/prevention & control , Physical Conditioning, Animal , Spatial Memory/drug effects , Animals , Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor/genetics , Hippocampus/pathology , Male , Maze Learning/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
5.
Br J Anaesth ; 122(4): 490-499, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30857605

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The factors determining peak susceptibility of the developing brain to anaesthetics are unclear. It is unknown why postnatal day 7 (P7) male rats are more vulnerable to anaesthesia-induced memory deficits than littermate females. Given the precocious development of certain regions in the female brain during the neonatal critical period, we hypothesised that females are susceptible to anaesthetic brain injury at an earlier time point than previously tested. METHODS: Female rats were exposed to isoflurane (Iso) 1 minimum alveolar concentration or sham anaesthesia at P4 or P7. Starting at P35, rats underwent a series of behavioural tasks to test their spatial and recognition memory. Cell death immediately after anaesthesia was quantified by Fluoro-Jade C staining in select brain regions, and developmental expression of the chloride transporters KCC2 and NKCC1 was analysed by immunoblotting in male and female rats at P4 and P7. RESULTS: Female rats exposed to Iso at P4 displayed impaired spatial, object-place, -context, and social recognition memory, and increased cell death in the hippocampus and laterodorsal thalamus. Female rats exposed at P7 exhibited only decreased performance in object-context compared with control. The ratio of NKCC1/KCC2 expression in cerebral cortex was higher in P4 females than in P7 females, and similar to that in P7 males. CONCLUSIONS: Female rats exposed to Iso at P4 are sensitive to anaesthetic injury historically observed in P7 males. This is consistent with a comparably immature developmental state in P4 females and P7 males. The window of anaesthetic vulnerability correlates with sex-specific cortical expression of chloride transporters NKCC1 and KCC2. These findings suggest that both sex and developmental age play important roles in determining the outcome after early anaesthesia exposure.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Inhalation/toxicity , Cognitive Dysfunction/chemically induced , Isoflurane/toxicity , Age Factors , Anesthetics, Inhalation/administration & dosage , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Cell Death/drug effects , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Cognitive Dysfunction/metabolism , Cognitive Dysfunction/pathology , Drug Administration Schedule , Female , Isoflurane/administration & dosage , Male , Maze Learning/drug effects , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Recognition, Psychology/drug effects , Sex Factors , Solute Carrier Family 12, Member 2/metabolism , Symporters/metabolism , K Cl- Cotransporters
6.
Ann Transl Med ; 4(20): 408, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27867960

ABSTRACT

Early life exposure to general anesthesia in preclinical studies has consistently led to permanent cognitive deficits later in life. However, the extent to which this finding is translatable to humans is the subject of much debate as the results from clinical studies have been mixed. Recently two well-designed clinical trials have attempted to add clarity to our murky understanding. The General Anesthesia compared to Spinal anesthesia (GAS) trial, was an international, prospective, randomized, multicenter, equivalence trial comparing infants undergoing herniorrhaphy receiving general anesthesia vs. neuraxial anesthesia. The results released are from a pre-determined secondary outcome of a behavioral/developmental assessment of 2 years old that found equivalence between the two groups. The Pediatric Anesthesia NeuroDevelopment Assessment (PANDA) trial was an ambi-directional cohort trial, comparing patients receiving general anesthesia for hernia repair before 3 years old vs. sibling-matched controls. The neuropsychological battery performed showed no difference between siblings. Taken together, there is cautious optimism that short anesthesia exposure may not lead to significant cognitive decline in humans, but one should also consider that the GAS trial has yet to release the primary endpoint, IQ testing at age 5, and the PANDA trial may not represent the general population given the high socioeconomic status and high control IQ scores. Furthermore, as seen in preclinical studies, the cognitive deficit might not be significant until later in life, and longer exposures to anesthesia may have a more deleterious effect on cognitive function. While these new studies greatly increase our understanding in humans, there are many more questions that need to be addressed.

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