Metabolic Blood-Brain Relationships Flashcards

1
Q

What proportion of the brain’s oxygen is used in the grey vs. white matter?

A

75% in grey matter

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2
Q

How does the brain cope with increased metabolic demand?

A

No storage of oxygen or fuels so increases blood flow

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3
Q

What happens in the brain when ATP is lost?

A

Na/K-ATPase pump is inhibited and ion gradients are destroyed, causing energy failure

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4
Q

What is phosphocreatine?

A

Precursor to creatine, can be used transiently to regenerate ATP under anaerobic conditions (ie. intense muscular effort or neuronal demand)
This occurs before ATP is used

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5
Q

How are astrocytes involved in synaptic transmission?

A

Their processes ensheath the synapse

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6
Q

What are the 5 ways things can pass through the BBB?

A

A. Paracellular aqueous through occluding tight junction
B. Transcellular lipophilic pathway (most drugs)
C. Transport proteins eg. glucose and AAs
D. Receptor-mediated transcytosis eg. insulin
E. Absorptive transcytosis

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7
Q

Where in the brain is glucose stored?

A

Usually not! Some glycogen is stored in astrocytes.

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8
Q

How does glucose enter the brain?

A

GLUT1 transporter on BBB and astrocytes

GLUT3 into neurons

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9
Q

What else can the brain use for fuel apart from glucose?

A

Lactate and ketone bodies

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10
Q

When does the brain use ketones as fuel?

A

During starvation and development

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11
Q

When is lactate produced?

A

Not in oxidative phosphorylation
In anaerobic glycolysis (limited O2)
In aerobic glycolysis (glucose -> lactate in presence of O2) AKA Warburg effect

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12
Q

How is lactate used?

A

Converted to pyruvate then enters TCA to make ATP

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13
Q

Where does the brain source lactate from?

A
  1. From blood via lactate transporters
  2. Local aerobic glycolysis
  3. Astrocyte-neuron shuttle hypothesis (astrocytes break down glycogen)
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14
Q

What occurs in the early stages of a hypoglycaemic coma?

A

O2 consumption continues and ATP/phosphocreatine levels stay constant

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15
Q

What occurs in later stages of a hypoglycaemic coma?

A

ATP decreases to 25-30% of control levels
Neuronal damage from oxidative stress, but death takes several hours
Neuronal release of glutamate often increased

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16
Q

What is oxidative stress and what damage results?

A

Imbalance between ROS and antioxidants

Oxideses proteins, lipids and DNA :. mitochondrial damage, DNA damage, energy failure and cell death

17
Q

What is hypoxia and how do we tolerate it?

A

Lack of oxygen: poorly tolerated as the brain needs O2 for energy ++
Cellular oxygen-sensing systems activate short-term and long-term adaptions

18
Q

What adaptions are activated in response to hypoxia?

A

Increase in local blood supply
Non-essential energy consuming mechanisms are shut down
RBC production and angiogenesis stimulated by gene transcription

19
Q

What is total energy failure?

A

Lack of O2, PCR used, ATP exhausted through blockage of Na/K-ATPase and ion gradients collapse, causing rapid and large depolarisation

20
Q

What events occur within 1 minute of brain ischaemia?

A

ATP failure
Collapse of ion gradients and depolarisation
Glutamate release and NMDA receptor activation
Ca influx
Excessive acidification

21
Q

How does the brain get energy during ischaemia?

A

Anaerobic glycolysis produces lactate (accumulation of this causes acidosis and aggravates brain damage)
- no lactic acidosis in hypoglycaemia as glucose precursor needed to make lactate!

22
Q

What are the 3 secondary mechanisms of ischaemic cell death?

A
  1. Intracellular Ca overload (increased glutamate release) causes metabolic stress and death
  2. Inflammatory reaction via microglia
  3. Eventually we get blood vessel leakage, oedema and BBB breakdown
23
Q

What are the steps of hypoxic ischaemia brain injury?

A

Insult
Primary energy failure within 2-10mins
Na overload/increased glutamate has transient reperfusion
Ca overload and oxidative stress causes secondary phase (6-72hrs after)
Mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation, BBB failure and permanent injury

24
Q

Which neuronal populations are most vulnerable to ischaemic damage?

A

Hippocampal CA1 and all of the middle laminae of the cortex

25
Q

What happens to brain metabolism in the ictal phase of a seizure?

A

Hypermetabolic state, increased blood flow, increased lactate production

26
Q

During interictal periods?

A

Lower glucose uptake and blood flow as energy requirements decrease

27
Q

What is the acute (mins to hours) response to a seizure?

A

Cell death after 1-3 hrs
Hippocampal sclerosis which results in glutamate excitotoxicity
Inflammation and BBB failure
Moderate lactic acidosis

28
Q

Hrs-months response?

A

Chronic Ca increase and synaptic remodelling

Acquired channel and BBB dysfunction