0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

Mitochondrial Damage Impairs Oxygen Metabolism After Intracerebral Hemorrhage

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2007-01-11 01:11:14
  • 조회수2141
  • 첨부파일첨부파일
By Will Boggs, MD NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Nov 01 - Mitochondrial damage around the hematoma, not ischemia, accounts for the reduced oxygen metabolism after intracerebral hemorrhage, according to a report in the October issue of Stroke. A primary reduction in brain metabolism follows ischemia, the authors explain, and this reduced brain metabolism is responsible for reduced cerebral blood flow and low oxygen extraction surrounding the hematoma. Dr. Jeong Sook Kim-Han and colleagues from Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri investigated whether mitochondrial function was impaired in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) by assessing mitochondrial respiration in perihematomal tissue removed during evacuation from 6 patients with acute spontaneous ICH compared to nonfocal tissue removed at the time of temporal lobe resection for the treatment of intractable epilepsy from 6 other patients. Tissues from ICH patients showed 40% lower oxygen consumption during state 3 respiration than control tissues, the researchers report. State 4 respiration was also reduced, the investigators say, reflecting inefficient mitochondrial energy production. State 3 and 4 respiration remained reasonable within the first 2 hours after hemorrhage, the results indicate, but mitochondria isolated after longer periods were extremely impaired. "I think the importance of this work is that it points to an entirely new concept in understanding brain injury following intracerebral hemorrhage," coinvestigator Dr. Michael Diringer told Reuters Health. "For decades it was thought that ischemia was an important cause of secondary injury in both head injury and intracerebral hemorrhage. Recent work suggests the rather than ischemia, mitochondrial function is an important issue. The distinction is very important in that therapies directed toward ischemia are unlikely to help." "We are very early in understanding this issue," Dr. Diringer said. "There are drugs used to modulate mitochondria in animals, but further work is needed to see if they would be safe and useful in humans. Another option is to give supplemental oxygen in an attempt to improve mitochondrial function." Stroke 2006;37:2457-2462,2445.
Total406 [ page26/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
31 Mitochondria and Diabetes 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,064
30 건강하게 오래오래 사세요. 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,070
29 향후 10년간의 의약품 R&D 예측: 미토콘드리아......심혈관질환의 치료표적 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,415
28 말아톤은.... 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 1,935
27 오래 오래 삽시다. 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 3,393
26 중년기의 심혈관 위험인자들이 치매 위험을 증가시켜...... 2005.01.28 한진 2005.01.28 1,933
25 세포 발견이 질병 인식을 이끌어낸다 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,843
24 심장 발작에 대한 9가지 주안점 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,781
23 미토콘드리아에서의 문제점들이 대사적 증후군에 중요한 역할을 한다 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,974
22 보다 나은 근육들을 만듬 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 2,012
21 다윈의 피리새들 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,923
20 Age well the mitochondria way 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 3,546
19 Mitochondria Make A Comeback, Science (Cover page) 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 3,329
18 The Mitochondrion: Central to Apoptosis (from Science) 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 6,107
17 L-carnitine needed transport fats 2005.01.26 문혜진 2005.01.26 2,661
처음 이전 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 다음마지막