Anoxic terminal negative DC-shift in human neocortical slices in vitro

1996-11-25 | journal article

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​Anoxic terminal negative DC-shift in human neocortical slices in vitro​
Köhling, R.; Schmidinger, A.; Hülsmann, S. ; Vanhatalo, S.; Lücke, A.; Straub, H. & Speckmann, E. J. et al.​ (1996) 
Brain Research741(1-2) pp. 174​-179​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0006-8993(96)00911-0 

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Authors
Köhling, R.; Schmidinger, A.; Hülsmann, S. ; Vanhatalo, S.; Lücke, A.; Straub, H.; Speckmann, E. J.; Tuxhorn, I.; Wolf, P.; Lahl, R.; Pannek, H.; Oppel, F.; Greiner, C.; Moskopp, D.; Wassmann, H.
Abstract
In animal models, the hallmark of a hypoxic condition is a strong negative shift of the DC potential (anoxic terminal negativity, ATN). This DC-shift is interpreted to be primarily due to a breakdown of the membrane potential of neurons. Such massive neuronal depolarizations have not been reported for all human neocortical neurons in vitro even during prolonged hypoxic periods. This poses the question whether ATN develop also in human neocortical slices made hypoxic. ATN could be observed when human brain slice preparations (n = 15, 13 patients) were subjected to periods of hypoxia (10 to 120 min). These ATN were usually monophasic and appeared with a latency of 16 +/- 4 min (mean +/- S.E.M.). Separating the ATN according to their slopes of rise, steep (> 10 mV/min) and flat (< 10 mV/min) ATN could be distinguished. Steep and flat ATN may be regarded as two different entities of reactions since steep ATN had also greater amplitudes and slopes of decay as compared a flat ATN. With repetitive hypoxias, the latency of both the steep and flat ATN was reduced for the following hypoxic episodes. During hypoxic DC-shifts, evoked potentials were suppressed. With the 1st through 4th hypoxia, they recovered fully within 30 min after reoxygenation when hypoxia was terminated at the plateau of ATN; with extension of hypoxia, recovery was only partial. From the 5th hypoxia onwards, recovery usually did not take place or was not complete.
Issue Date
25-November-1996
Journal
Brain Research 
ISSN
0006-8993
Language
English

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