Do epoch lengths of hypnotic depth indicators affect estimated of blood-brain equilibration rate constants of propofol?

Author(s):  
Kyung Mi Kim ◽  
Sookyung Park ◽  
Bong Jin Kang ◽  
Byung-Moon Choi ◽  
Gyu-Jeong Noh ◽  
...  
1987 ◽  
Vol 252 (3) ◽  
pp. E299-E303 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Namba ◽  
G. Lucignani ◽  
A. Nehlig ◽  
C. Patlak ◽  
K. Pettigrew ◽  
...  

The effects of insulin on 3-O-[14C]methylglucose transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) were studied in conscious rats under steady-state normoglycemic conditions. The [14C]methylglucose was infused intravenously at a constant rate, and animals were killed at various times between 5 and 30 min after the initiation of the infusion. The time course of the arterial plasma concentration of [14C]methylglucose was determined in timed arterial blood samples taken during the infusion. Local cerebral tissue concentrations of [14C]methylglucose at the time of killing were determined by quantitative autoradiography of brain sections. The rate constants for inward and outward transport of [14C]methylglucose across the BBB, K1, and k2, respectively, were estimated by a least-squares, best-fit of a kinetic equation to the measured time courses of plasma and tissue concentrations. K1 and k2 were reduced by an average of 24 and 31%, respectively, in gray matter and 7 and 16% in white matter from values estimated similarly in normal insulinemic control rats. The equilibrium distribution ratio, K1/k2, for [14C]methylglucose in brain increased by approximately 10–11% in the hyperinsulinemic animals. Because 3-O-[14C]methylglucose shares the same carrier that transports glucose and other hexoses across the BBB, these results suggest that hyperinsulinemia decreases the rate constants for transport but increases the distribution space for hexoses in brain. These effects are, however, quite small and are probably minor or negligible when compared with the major effects of insulin in other tissues.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald G. Blasberg ◽  
Joseph D. Fenstermacher ◽  
Clifford S. Patlak

The transport of α-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), N-methyl-AIB (MeAIB), and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) from blood to brain was measured over different experimental periods in eight regions of the rat brain. Unidirectional transfer rate constants were determined from multiple-time/graphical and single-time analysis of the experimental data; values of 0,0018, 0,00057, and 0,000021 ml g−1 min−1, respectively, were obtained for the thalamus by graphical analysis, The initial distribution volume of AIB and MeAIB in brain tissue was several-fold greater than that of DTPA and the tissue plasma volume, and this difference was not accounted for by red blood cell uptake, This discrepancy could be due to rapid transport of AIB and MeAIB into brain endothelial cells in addition to the relatively rapid uptake by choroidal, meningeal, and ependymal associated tissues that was demonstrated by autoradiography. Thus, it may be misleading and erroneous to consider the blood–brain barrier (BBB) to be a simple, single-membrane structure when analyzing the blood–brain transfer data of solutes such as amino acids. The data from the ventriculocisternal perfusion experiments and previously published AIB uptake data in mouse brain slices were used to estimate the transfer rate constants across brain cell membranes. These studies indicated that the transport of AIB into brain cells was approximately 110 to 265 times greater than that across normal brain capillaries per unit mass of brain tissue, and that the BBB limits blood-to-brain cell transport of this amino acid. These observations (low rate of transport across normal brain capillaries and rapid concentrative uptake by brain cells) indicate that AIB is a good marker for measuring moderate to large increases in BBB permeability by experiments that require unidirectional flux of the tracer.


1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 576-580 ◽  
Author(s):  
James L. Lear ◽  
Ravindra K. Kasliwal

We used quantitative autoradiography to measure the regional rate constants of blood-to-brain transport of lactate in normal rats and rats treated with kainic acid. Mean cerebral values of lactate transport rate constants were not significantly different between the normal and treated rats, being 0.13 and 0.14 min−1 (ml/g), respectively. Regional values were also generally similar between the groups, but structures that are known to be activated by kainic acid showed increased values in the treated rats compared with rates in the controls. Our measured values of lactate transport rate constants are ∼50% as great as those published for glucose, indicating that blood–brain transfer of lactate can be significant. This observation supports the hypothesis that radiolabel derived from glucose can leave the brain as radiolabeled lactate in conditions in which intracerebral lactate concentration rises, a hypothesis that has previously been presented to explain differences between rates of accumulation of radiolabel derived from deoxyglucose and glucose in such conditions.


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