Pathophysiology of the neurovascular unit: disease cause or consequence?

DB Stanimirovic, A Friedman - Journal of Cerebral Blood …, 2012 - journals.sagepub.com
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2012journals.sagepub.com
Pathophysiology of the neurovascular unit (NVU) is commonly seen in neurological
diseases. The typical features of NVU pathophysiology include tissue hypoxia, inflammatory
and angiogenic activation, as well as initiation of complex molecular interactions between
cellular (brain endothelial cells, astroctyes, pericytes, inflammatory cells, and neurons) and
acellular (basal lamina) components of the NVU, jointly resulting in increased blood–brain
barrier permeability, brain edema, neurovascular uncoupling, and neuronal dysfunction and …
Pathophysiology of the neurovascular unit (NVU) is commonly seen in neurological diseases. The typical features of NVU pathophysiology include tissue hypoxia, inflammatory and angiogenic activation, as well as initiation of complex molecular interactions between cellular (brain endothelial cells, astroctyes, pericytes, inflammatory cells, and neurons) and acellular (basal lamina) components of the NVU, jointly resulting in increased blood–brain barrier permeability, brain edema, neurovascular uncoupling, and neuronal dysfunction and damage. The evidence of important role of the brain vascular compartment in disease pathogenesis has elicited the debate whether the primary vascular events may be a cause of the neurological disease, as opposed to a mere participant recruited by a primary neuronal origin of pathology? Whereas some hereditary and acquired cerebral angiopathies could be considered a primary cause of neurological symptoms of the disease, the epidemiological studies showing a high degree of comorbidity among vascular disease and dementias, including Alzheimer's disease, as well as migraine and epilepsy, suggested that primary vascular pathology may be etiological factor causing neuronal dysfunction or degeneration in these diseases. This review focuses on recent hypotheses and evidence, suggesting that pathophysiology of the NVU may be initiating trigger for neuronal pathology and subsequent neurological manifestations of the disease.
Sage Journals