Chilled
brain opens window for stroke treatment Finding provides more time for doctors to protect brain
cells
By AMY ADAMS
Treating stroke is all a matter of timing:
therapy delivered too late misses the critical window when neurons
can still be saved. A report by School of Medicine researchers
shows that cooling the brain can lengthen the therapeutic window,
giving doctors more time to protect brain cells.
The idea of cooling the brain isn’t new. Study leader Gary
Steinberg, MD, PhD, the Lacroute-Hearst Professor of Neurosurgery
and the Neurosciences, said he started cooling brains using a
cooling blanket on patients’ bodies during brain surgery in
1991. For some types of surgeries, a brain that’s 4 degrees
cooler than normal seems to resist injury better than a brain at
normal body temperature.
In collaboration with Robert Sapolsky, PhD, the John A. and Cynthia
Fry Gunn Professor of Biological Sciences, Steinberg has combined
this cooling treatment with a form of gene therapy. Together the
approaches work better than either technique on its own to save
neurons after a stroke. What’s more, cooling the brains in
rats slowed the neurons’ demise, giving researchers more time
to administer additional treatment.
“We think this work has considerable potential,”
Steinberg said. The study appeared in the February issue of the
journal Stroke.
In past experiments, Steinberg’s and Sapolsky’s groups
have shown that giving rats a form of gene therapy within 90
minutes after a stroke can help brain cells survive. The gene they
insert, called Bcl-2, prevents cells from following a ritualized
form of cell death. Proteins involved in this fatal pathway usually
skyrocket after a stroke and brain cells die en masse.
Although the gene therapy’s success was good news, giving
Bcl-2 after the initial window had no effect – the cell-death
proteins had already been released and the cells were beyond
recovery. However, Steinberg said it is rare for stroke patients to
receive treatment within that narrow 90-minute time frame.
Steinberg and his colleagues thought that chilling the brains might
slow the release of cell-death molecules, allowing a longer window
in which Bcl-2 treatment could be effective.
In the study, researchers cut off the blood supply to a portion of
the brain in rats, simulating a stroke. Some rats recovered at the
normal body temperature while others had their temperature lowered
by 4 degrees until the researchers gave Bcl-2 gene therapy five
hours later.
The number of surviving neurons was the same in all mice that had
no gene therapy and in mice that had gene therapy without cooling.
However, the mice in which the lowered body temperature was
followed by gene therapy had two to three times more neurons
surviving two days after the stroke.
Steinberg said if this finding holds true in humans then chilling
the brain may give doctors more time to treat stroke patients. This
longer opening could make the difference in enabling patients to
retain such functions as control of their limbs or the ability to
speak normally after a stroke.
Steinberg added that for now, Bcl-2 gene therapy isn’t an
option for humans because the method used to insert the gene
hasn’t been perfected. Rather, he said researchers can begin
looking at other treatments that may be possible to complete within
the longer therapeutic window. These treatments include one of a
wide range of proteins that, like Bcl-2, thwart the cell-suicide
pathway and keep cells alive.
“We’re also pursuing hypothermia with other genes to
extend the therapeutic window,” Steinberg said.
Heng Zhao, PhD, research associate, was lead author of the study.
Midori Yenari, MD, associate professor of neurosurgery and of
neurology and neurological sciences, also contributed to the
work.
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