Blood‐brain barrier dysfunction in canine epileptic seizures detected by dynamic contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance imaging
Autor: | Orit Chai, Guy Bar-Klein, Alon Friedman, Maria Elkin, Merav H. Shamir, Erez Hanael, Ronel Veksler, Vladimir V. Senatorov, Lilach Konstantin, Dana Peery, Daniela Kaufer |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Pathology medicine.medical_specialty Contrast Media Convulsants Neuroimaging Piriform Cortex Status epilepticus Blood–brain barrier Epileptogenesis Paraoxon 03 medical and health sciences Epilepsy Dogs Status Epilepticus 0302 clinical medicine Cerebrospinal fluid Transforming Growth Factor beta Albumins Piriform cortex Animals Medicine Dog Diseases Gliosis Prospective Studies Serum Albumin Neuroinflammation medicine.diagnostic_test Brain Neoplasms business.industry Magnetic resonance imaging medicine.disease Magnetic Resonance Imaging Rats 030104 developmental biology medicine.anatomical_structure Neurology Blood-Brain Barrier Neurology (clinical) medicine.symptom business Algorithms 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Signal Transduction |
Zdroj: | Epilepsia. 60:1005-1016 |
ISSN: | 1528-1167 0013-9580 |
Popis: | Objective Dogs with spontaneous or acquired epilepsy exhibit resemblance in etiology and disease course to humans, potentially offering a translational model of the human disease. Blood-brain barrier dysfunction (BBBD) has been shown to partake in epileptogenesis in experimental models of epilepsy. To test the hypothesis that BBBD can be detected in dogs with naturally occurring seizures, we developed a linear dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) analysis algorithm that was validated in clinical cases of seizing dogs and experimental epileptic rats. Methods Forty-six dogs with naturally occurring seizures of different etiologies and 12 induced epilepsy rats were imaged using DCE-MRI. Six healthy dogs and 12 naive rats served as control. DCE-MRI was analyzed by linear-dynamic method. BBBD scores were calculated in whole brain and in specific brain regions. Immunofluorescence analysis for transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) pathway proteins was performed on the piriform cortex of epileptic dogs. Results We found BBBD in 37% of dogs with seizures. A significantly higher cerebrospinal fluid to serum albumin ratio was found in dogs with BBBD relative to dogs with intact blood-brain barrier (BBB). A significant difference was found between epileptic and control rats when BBBD scores were calculated for the piriform cortex at 48 hours and 1 month after status epilepticus. Mean BBBD score of the piriform lobe in idiopathic epilepsy (IE) dogs was significantly higher compared to control. Immunohistochemistry results suggested active TGF-β signaling and neuroinflammation in the piriform cortex of dogs with IE, showing increased levels of serum albumin colocalized with glial acidic fibrillary protein and pSMAD2 in an area where BBBD had been detected by linear DCE-MRI. Significance Detection of BBBD in dogs with naturally occurring epilepsy provides the ground for future studies for evaluation of novel treatment targeting the disrupted BBB. The involvement of the piriform lobe seen using our linear DCE-MRI protocol and algorithm emphasizes the possibility of using dogs as a translational model for the human disease. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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