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Neuronal Swelling: A Non-osmotic Consequence of Spreading Depolarization
- Source :
- Neurocritical Care
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- An acute reduction in plasma osmolality causes rapid uptake of water by astrocytes but not by neurons, whereas both cell types swell as a consequence of lost blood flow (ischemia). Either hypoosmolality or ischemia can displace the brain downwards, potentially causing death. However, these disorders are fundamentally different at the cellular level. Astrocytes osmotically swell or shrink because they express functional water channels (aquaporins), whereas neurons lack functional aquaporins and thus maintain their volume. Yet both neurons and astrocytes immediately swell when blood flow to the brain is compromised (cytotoxic edema) as following stroke onset, sudden cardiac arrest, or traumatic brain injury. In each situation, neuronal swelling is the direct result of spreading depolarization (SD) generated when the ATP-dependent sodium/potassium ATPase (the Na+/K+ pump) is compromised. The simple, and incorrect, textbook explanation for neuronal swelling is that increased Na+ influx passively draws Cl− into the cell, with water following by osmosis via some unknown conduit. We first review the strong evidence that mammalian neurons resist volume change during acute osmotic stress. We then contrast this with their dramatic swelling during ischemia. Counter-intuitively, recent research argues that ischemic swelling of neurons is non-osmotic, involving ion/water cotransporters as well as at least one known amino acid water pump. While incompletely understood, these mechanisms argue against the dogma that neuronal swelling involves water uptake driven by an osmotic gradient with aquaporins as the conduit. Promoting clinical recovery from neuronal cytotoxic edema evoked by spreading depolarizations requires a far better understanding of molecular water pumps and ion/water cotransporters that act to rebalance water shifts during brain ischemia.
- Subjects :
- Spreading depolarization
Osmosis
Osmotic shock
Ischemia
Aquaporin
Spreading Cortical Depolarization
Osmolality
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Brain Ischemia
Brain ischemia
Water intoxication
Inappropriate ADH syndrome
medicine
Animals
Cytotoxic cerebral edema
Neurons
business.industry
Osmolar concentration
SIADH
Depolarization
medicine.disease
Stroke
Cerebral blood flow
Astrocytes
Brain edema
Biophysics
Neurology (clinical)
business
Cotransporter
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15560961 and 15416933
- Volume :
- 35
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Neurocritical Care
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9946b6ed2c71a4c2a3753e748df39b57
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-021-01326-w