Background: If anaesthetics cause permanent cognitive deficits in some children, the implications are enormous, but the molecular causes of anaesthetic-induced neurotoxicity, and consequently possible therapies, are still debated. Anaesthetic exposure early in development can be neurotoxic in the invertebrate Caenorhabditis elegans causing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and defects in chemotaxis during adulthood. We screened this model organism for compounds that alleviated neurotoxicity, and then tested these candidates for efficacy in mice.
Methods: We screened compounds for alleviation of ER stress induction by isoflurane in C. elegans assayed by induction of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter. Drugs that inhibited ER stress were screened for reduction of the anaesthetic-induced chemotaxis defect. Compounds that alleviated both aspects of neurotoxicity were then blindly tested for the ability to inhibit induction of caspase-3 by isoflurane in P7 mice.
Results: Isoflurane increased ER stress indicated by increased GFP reporter fluorescence (240% increase, P<0.001). Nine compounds reduced induction of ER stress by isoflurane by 90-95% (P<0.001 in all cases). Of these compounds, tetraethylammonium chloride and trehalose also alleviated the isoflurane-induced defect in chemotaxis (trehalose by 44%, P=0.001; tetraethylammonium chloride by 23%, P<0.001). In mouse brain, tetraethylammonium chloride reduced isoflurane-induced caspase staining in the anterior cortical (-54%, P=0.007) and hippocampal regions (-46%, P=0.002).
Discussion: Tetraethylammonium chloride alleviated isoflurane-induced neurotoxicity in two widely divergent species, raising the likelihood that it may have therapeutic value. In C. elegans, ER stress predicts isoflurane-induced neurotoxicity, but is not its cause.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2021.09.036 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Anaesth
December 2021
Department of Anaesthesiology, Indira Gandhi Medical College, Shimla, Himachal Pradesh, India.
Background And Aims: Recent reports of local-anaesthetic induced myotoxicity after peripheral nerve blocks have increased interest in this less commonly known complication. Although the morphological, physiological and biochemical changes in muscle after injection of clinically used concentration of bupivacaine have been studied in animals, little research has been conducted on human subjects, especially in relation to fascial plane blocks. We conducted a study to examine the changes in circulating creatine phosphokinase (CPK) levels in patients undergoing modified radical mastectomy (MRM) or mesh hernioplasty (MH) with or without peripheral nerve blocks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Anaesth
January 2022
Center for Integrative Brain Research, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA; Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA. Electronic address:
Background: If anaesthetics cause permanent cognitive deficits in some children, the implications are enormous, but the molecular causes of anaesthetic-induced neurotoxicity, and consequently possible therapies, are still debated. Anaesthetic exposure early in development can be neurotoxic in the invertebrate Caenorhabditis elegans causing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and defects in chemotaxis during adulthood. We screened this model organism for compounds that alleviated neurotoxicity, and then tested these candidates for efficacy in mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBraz J Anesthesiol
October 2021
The First Hospital of Lanzhou University, Department of Anaesthesiology, Lanzho, China.
Background And Objectives: The mechanisms by which local anesthetics cause neurotoxicity are very complicated. Apoptosis and autophagy are highly coordinated mechanisms that maintain cellular homeostasis against stress. Studies have shown that autophagy activation serves as a protective mechanism .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Anaesth
January 2021
Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA. Electronic address:
Br J Anaesth
May 2020
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA. Electronic address:
Background: The most currently used general anaesthetics are potent potentiators of γ-aminobutyric acid A (GABA) receptors and are invariably neurotoxic during the early stages of brain development in preclinical animal models. As causality between GABA potentiation and anaesthetic-induced developmental neurotoxicity has not been established, the question remains whether GABAergic activity is crucial for promoting/enhancing neurotoxicity. Using the neurosteroid analogue, (3α,5α)-3-hydroxy-13,24-cyclo-18,21-dinorchol-22-en-24-ol (CDNC24), which potentiates recombinant GABA receptors, we examined whether this potentiation is the driving force in inducing neurotoxicity during development.
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