scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Fibrin contributes to microvascular obstructions and parenchymal changes during early focal cerebral ischemia and reperfusion.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is suggested that microvascular fibrin deposition accumulates in a time-dependent manner during focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion and that exposure of plasma to perivascular tissue factor is partially responsible for occlusion formation.
Abstract
Ischemic cerebral injury is associated with activation of the blood coagulation cascade. To elucidate the contribution of fibrin formation to microvascular injury during focal cerebral ischemia and reperfusion, we have studied the time course and the localization of fibrin deposition in cerebral microvessels and the surrounding tissues during ischemia/reperfusion in a well-described nonhuman primate model. Cerebral tissues from adolescent male baboons were examined after 2-hour middle cerebral artery occlusion (n = 3) and after 3 hours of middle cerebral artery occlusion and 1-hour (n = 6), 4-hour (n = 3), and 24-hour (n = 4) reperfusion; tissues from control primates (n = 3) also were examined. Fibrin deposition was detected by immunohistochemical techniques using the fibrin-specific monoclonal antibody MH-1. The number and size distribution of microvessels associated with fibrin were quantified by video-imaging microscopy. Fibrin was associated with microvessels only in the ischemic zone where severe neuronal injury was documented, its frequency increasing with the reperfusion period (F4,26 = 3.80, P < .05). Extravascular fibrin deposition was significantly increased by 24-hour reperfusion compared with the other subjects (P < .05). Preischemia infusion of the anti-tissue factor monoclonal antibody TF9-6B4 resulted in significant reduction of intramicrovascular fibrin (P < .038 versus no intervention) at 1-hour reperfusion but had no effect on extravascular fibrin deposition. These results suggest that microvascular fibrin deposition accumulates in a time-dependent manner during focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion and that exposure of focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion and that exposure of plasma to perivascular tissue factor is partially responsible for occlusion formation. During ischemia the large plasma protein fibrinogen extravasates and interacts with parenchymal tissue factor, forming significant extravascular fibrin by 24 hours of reperfusion.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Fibrinogen as a key regulator of inflammation in disease

TL;DR: The role of fibrinogen in inflammatory disease is focused on highlighting its unique structural properties, cellular targets, and signal transduction pathways that make it a potent proinflammatory mediator and a potential therapeutic target.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral microvessel responses to focal ischemia.

TL;DR: The panorama of acute microvessel responses to focal cerebral ischemia provide opportunities to understand interrelationships between neurons and their microvascular supply and changes that underlie a number of central nervous system neurodegenerative disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Matrix Metalloproteinases Increase Very Early During Experimental Focal Cerebral Ischemia

TL;DR: Findings highlight the early potential role of MMP-2 in the degradation of basal lamina leading to neuronal injury, and an association of M MP-9 with hemorrhagic transformation after focal cerebral ischemia, which is highly correlated with the extent of neuron injury and the number of injured neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

The complexity of neurobiological processes in acute ischemic stroke

TL;DR: This review focuses on the ischemic cascade, which is a complex series of neurochemical processes that are unleashed by transient or permanent focal cerebral ischemia and involves cellular bioenergetic failure, excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, blood-brain barrier dysfunction, microvascular injury, hemostatic activation, post-ischemic inflammation and finally cell death of neurons, glial and endothelial cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microvascular Basal Lamina Antigens Disappear During Cerebral Ischemia and Reperfusion

TL;DR: The significant parallel losses of three basal lamina components, both in number and intensity, contribute to loss of microvascular integrity and may be important for understanding cell extravasation and the hemorrhagic consequences of acute stroke.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Tumors: wounds that do not heal. Similarities between tumor stroma generation and wound healing.

TL;DR: Tumors of epithelioma are composed of two discrete but interdependent compartments: the malignant cells themselves and the stroma that they induce and in which they are dispersed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved technique utilizing nonfat dry milk for analysis of proteins and nucleic acids transferred to nitrocellulose

TL;DR: The incubation cocktail, termed BLOTTO (Bovine Lacto Transfer Technique Optimizer), is superior to bovine serum albumin or gelatin for preventing nonspecific absorption in Western blot analyses and does not require the use of detergents or chaotropic agents to effect efficient reduction of background.
Journal Article

Selective cellular expression of tissue factor in human tissues. Implications for disorders of hemostasis and thrombosis.

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that intrav vascular initiation of coagulation requires induced expression by intravascular cells, and that the normal distribution of TF represents a hemostatic "envelope" ready to activate coagulations when vascular integrity is disrupted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leukocyte accumulation promoting fibrin deposition is mediated in vivo by P-selectin on adherent platelets.

TL;DR: Results indicate that P-selectin is an important adhesion molecule on platelets, mediating platelet–leukocyte binding in vivo, that the presence of leukocytes in thrombi is mediated by P- selectin, and that these leukocyte promote fibrin deposition.
Related Papers (5)