AI Article Synopsis

  • Mild hypothermia can help manage neurological complications in patients with acute liver failure by altering the expression of certain brain proteins.
  • In an experimental study on rats, it was found that acute liver failure led to a significant increase in the expression of the peripheral-type benzodiazepine receptor (PTBR) and higher levels of brain pregnenolone, a neurosteroid.
  • Mild hypothermia (35 degrees C) was shown to prevent brain swelling and decrease both PTBR expression and pregnenolone levels, indicating a protective mechanism against neurological damage in acute liver failure.

Article Abstract

Background/aims: Mild hypothermia has proven useful in the clinical management of patients with acute liver failure. Acute liver failure in experimental animals results in alterations in the expression of genes coding for astrocytic proteins including the "peripheral-type" (astrocytic) benzodiazepine receptor (PTBR), a mitochondrial complex associated with neurosteroid synthesis. To gain further insight into the mechanisms whereby hypothermia attenuates the neurological complications of acute liver failure, we investigated PTBR expression in the brains of hepatic devascularized rats under normothermic (37 degrees C) and hypothermic (35 degrees C) conditions.

Methods: PTBR mRNA was measured using semi-quantitative RT-PCR in cerebral cortical extracts and densities of PTBR sites were measured by quantitative receptor autoradiagraphy. Brain pregnenolone content was measured by radioimmunoassay.

Results: At coma stages of encephalopathy, animals with acute liver failure manifested a significant increase of PTBR mRNA levels. Brain pregnenolone content and [(3)H]PK 11195 binding site densities were concomitantly increased. Mild hypothermia prevented brain edema and significantly attenuated the increased receptor expression and pregnenolone content.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that an attenuation of PTBR up-regulation resulting in the prevention of increased brain neurosteroid content represents one of the mechanisms by which mild hypothermia exerts its protective effects in ALF.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2004.12.029DOI Listing

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