AI Article Synopsis

  • Diving Response (DR) is a survival mechanism present in all animals, allowing them to cope with low oxygen conditions, which was previously linked to neuroprotection in brain injury models in rats.
  • The study examines how cold stimulation of the forehead can trigger a physiological response similar to that of ammonia stimulation in the nasal cavity, both of which induce DR in rats.
  • Results indicate the forehead's cold stimulation may provide neuroprotective benefits without the direct involvement of the subthalamic vasodilator area, suggesting its potential for neuroprotective therapy.

Article Abstract

Diving response (DR) is a powerful integrative response targeted toward survival of the hypoxic/anoxic conditions. Being present in all animals and humans, it allows to survive adverse conditions like diving. Earlier, we discovered that forehead stimulation affords neuroprotective effect, decreasing infarction volume triggered by permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery in rats. We hypothesized that cold stimulation of the forehead induces DR in rats, which, in turn, exerts neuroprotection. We compared autonomic [AP, heart rate (HR), cerebral blood flow (CBF)] and EEG responses to the known DR-triggering stimulus, ammonia stimulation of the nasal mucosa, cold stimulation of the forehead, and cold stimulation of the glabrous skin of the tail base in anesthetized rats. Responses in AP, HR, CBF, and EEG to cold stimulation of the forehead and ammonia vapors instillation into the nasal cavity were comparable and differed significantly from responses to the cold stimulation of the tail base. Excitotoxic lesion of the subthalamic vasodilator area (SVA), which is known to participate in CBF regulation and to afford neuroprotection upon excitation, failed to affect autonomic components of the DR evoked by forehead cold stimulation or nasal mucosa ammonia stimulation. We conclude that cold stimulation of the forehead triggers physiological response comparable to the response evoked by ammonia vapor instillation into nasal cavity, which is considered as stimulus triggering protective DR. These observations may explain the neuroprotective effect of the forehead stimulation. Data demonstrate that SVA does not directly participate in the autonomic adjustments accompanying DR; however, it is involved in diving-evoked modulation of EEG. We suggest that forehead stimulation can be employed as a stimulus capable of triggering oxygen-conserving DR and can be used for neuroprotective therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5030511PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2016.00157DOI Listing

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