'Ischemic tolerance'phenomenon found in the brain

K Kitagawa, M Matsumoto, M Tagaya, R Hata, H Ueda… - Brain research, 1990 - Elsevier
K Kitagawa, M Matsumoto, M Tagaya, R Hata, H Ueda, M Niinobe, N Handa, R Fukunaga…
Brain research, 1990Elsevier
We investigated the possibility that neuronal cells given a mild ischemic treatment sufficient
to perturb the cellular metabolism acquired tolerance to a subsequent, and what would be
lethal, ischemic stress in vivo. Cerebral ischemia was produced in the gerbils by occlusion of
both common carotids for 5 min, which consistently resulted in delayed neuronal death in
the CA1 region of the hippocampus. Minor 2-min ischemia in this model depletes high-
energy phosphate compounds and perturbs the protein synthesis, but nerver causes …
Abstract
We investigated the possibility that neuronal cells given a mild ischemic treatment sufficient to perturb the cellular metabolism acquired tolerance to a subsequent, and what would be lethal, ischemic stress in vivo. Cerebral ischemia was produced in the gerbils by occlusion of both common carotids for 5 min, which consistently resulted in delayed neuronal death in the CA1 region of the hippocampus. Minor 2-min ischemia in this model depletes high-energy phosphate compounds and perturbs the protein synthesis, but nerver causes neuronal necrosis, and therefore was chosen as mild ischemic treatment. Single 2-min ischemia 1 day or 2 days before 5 min ischemia exhibited only partial protective effects against delayed neuronal death. However, two 2-min ischemic treatments at 1 day intervals 2 days before 5 min ischemia exhibited drastically complete protection against neuronal death. The duration and intervals of ischemic treatment, enough to perturb cellular metabolism and cause protein syhthesis, were needed respectively, because neither 1-min ischemia nor 2-min ischemia received twice at short intervals exhibited protective effects. This ‘ischemic tolerance’ phenomenon induced by ischemic stress — which is unquestionably important — and frequent stress in clinical medicine, is intriguing and may open a new approach to investigate the pathophysiology of ischemic neuronal damage.
Elsevier