normobaric hyperoxia
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Author(s):  
Colin A. Lemire ◽  
Brendan Seto ◽  
Keiko Yamada ◽  
Jorge G. Arroyo

2020 ◽  
pp. 0271678X2095199
Author(s):  
Paul Fischer ◽  
Kazutaka Sugimoto ◽  
David Y Chung ◽  
Isra Tamim ◽  
Andreia Morais ◽  
...  

Recurrent waves of spreading depolarization (SD) occur in brain injury and are thought to affect outcomes. What triggers SD in intracerebral hemorrhage is poorly understood. We employed intrinsic optical signaling, laser speckle flowmetry, and electrocorticography to elucidate the mechanisms triggering SD in a collagenase model of intracortical hemorrhage in mice. Hematoma growth, SD occurrence, and cortical blood flow changes were tracked. During early hemorrhage (0–4 h), 17 out of 38 mice developed SDs, which always originated from the hematoma. No SD was detected at late time points (8–52 h). Neither hematoma size, nor peri-hematoma perfusion were associated with SD occurrence. Further, arguing against ischemia as a trigger factor, normobaric hyperoxia did not inhibit SD occurrence. Instead, SDs always occurred during periods of rapid hematoma growth, which was two-fold faster immediately preceding an SD compared with the peak growth rates in animals that did not develop any SDs. Induced hypertension accelerated hematoma growth and resulted in a four-fold increase in SD occurrence compared with normotensive animals. Altogether, our data suggest that spontaneous SDs in this intracortical hemorrhage model are triggered by the mechanical distortion of tissue by rapidly growing hematomas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (11) ◽  
pp. 2723-2731
Author(s):  
Yanteng Li ◽  
Wenying Lv ◽  
Gang Cheng ◽  
Shuwei Wang ◽  
Bangxin Liu ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 709-714
Author(s):  
Jason F. Naylor ◽  
Matthew A. Borgman ◽  
Michael D. April ◽  
Guyon J. Hill ◽  
Steven G. Schauer

Biomolecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 282
Author(s):  
David De Bels ◽  
Frauke Tillmans ◽  
Francis Corazza ◽  
Mariano Bizzarri ◽  
Peter Germonpre ◽  
...  

Oxygenation conditions are crucial for growth and tumor progression. Recent data suggests a decrease in cancer cell proliferation occurring after exposure to normobaric hyperoxia. Those changes are associated with fractal dimension. The purpose of this research was to study the impact of hyperoxia on apoptosis and morphology of leukemia cell lines. Two hematopoietic lymphoid cancer cell lines (a T-lymphoblastoid line, JURKAT and a B lymphoid line, CCRF-SB) were tested under conditions of normobaric hyperoxia (FiO2 > 60%, ± 18h) and compared to a standard group (FiO2 = 21%). We tested for apoptosis using a caspase-3 assay. Cell morphology was evaluated by cytospin, microphotography after coloration, and analysis by a fractal dimension calculation software. Our results showed that exposure of cell cultures to transient normobaric hyperoxia induced apoptosis (elevated caspase-3) as well as significant and precocious modifications in cell complexity, as highlighted by increased fractal dimensions in both cell lines. These features are associated with changes in structure (pycnotic nucleus and apoptosis) recorded by microscopic analysis. Such morphological alterations could be due to several molecular mechanisms and rearrangements in the cancer cell, leading to cell cycle inhibition and apoptosis as shown by caspase-3 activity. T cells seem less resistant to hyperoxia than B cells.


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