The stress-related changes in the cerebral blood flow in newborn rats with intracranial hemorrhage: metabolic and endothelial mechanisms


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Abstract

Neonatal brain hemorrhages is a major problem of future generation’s health due to the high rate of cognitive disability of newborns after vascular catastrophes in the brain. Despite the public health impact of neonatal brain hemorrhages, the mechanisms underlying in these pathological processes remain unknown. Here, using a model of sound-stress-induced brain hemorrhages (per diapedesis, no per rhexis) in newborn rats and optical methods, we found that brain hemorrhages in newborn rats are accompanied by the increase in perfusion of brain tissues, which closely associated with reducing of cerebral oxygenation and increasing of nitric oxide production in both the brain tissues and blood. We assume that nitric oxide contributes the dilation of cerebral vessels during hypoxia and the increasing of cerebral blood flow in newborn rats with brain hemorrhages. Hypoxic-hyperperfusion during stress-related hemorrhages in newborn animals can be an important protective mechanism against anoxia and critical changes in cerebral hemodynamics.

About the authors

Olga Sindeeva

Saratov State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: mouse-oa@rambler.ru
Department of Biology, Chair of Human and Animal Physiology, Teaching Assistant Russian Federation

Ekaterina Borisova

Institute of Electronics

Email: borisiva@ie.bas.bg
Bulgaria

Arkady Abdurashitov

Saratov State University

Email: aarkady@icloud.com
Russian Federation

Ekaterina Zhinchenko

Saratov State University

Email: odonata1108@yandex.ru
Russian Federation

Artem Gekalyuk

Saratov State University

Email: gekalyuk.a@mail.ru
Russian Federation

Maria Ulanova

Saratov State University

Email: maru-ulanova@mail.ru
Russian Federation

Aly Esmat Sharif

Saratov State University

Email: alyessha@yahoo.com
Russian Federation

Victoria Razubaeva

Saratov State University

Email: viktori2812@yandex.ru
Russian Federation

Sergey Serov

Saratov State University

Email: serovsa@mail.ru
Russian Federation

Ludmila Yankovskaya

Grodno State Medical University

Email: mouse-oa@rambler.ru
Belarus

Valery Tuchin

Saratov State University

Email: tuchinvv@mail.ru
Russian Federation

Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya

Saratov State University

Email: tuchinvv@mail.ru
Russian Federation

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