ABSTRACT
Objective:
Diffuse brain injury is one of the most common issues encountered in, patients with trauma and it leads to morbidity and mortality via increased intracranial pressure. The aim of the study was to compare the effects of magnesium sulfate and hypertonic saline on diffuse brain injury in rats.
Materials and Methods:
In this study 18 male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 250-300 g were used. The rats were randomly divided into trauma (control), trauma+magnesium, and trauma+hypertonic saline groups. Traumatic brain injury was induced by modified Feeney head trauma model. A single dose of 10 µL isotonic saline, magnesium sulphate and hypertonic saline were applied intraventricularly to the control, magnesium, and hypertonic saline groups, respectively. Rats were decapitated 24 hours after the head trauma. Their brains were dissected immediately and stored with dry ice at -80 °C for histopathological experiments.
Results:
The number of damaged neurons were significantly higher in both control and hypertonic saline groups (p=0.001, p=0.008). However, the number of damaged neurons did not show significant difference between hypertonic saline and control groups, it was significantly lower in magnesium group (p<0.05).
Conclusion:
In this study, intraventricular magnesium application is found effective in reducing the number of the damaged neurons in rat traumatic brain injury model. These results suggest that magnesium usage may be evaluated for the treatment of patients with traumatic brain injury in further prospective studies.
Introduction
Formation of the brain edema is one of the most challenging problems encountered after the head trauma (1,2). It leads to morbidity and mortality via increased intracranial pressure, for which many efforts have been made for the best treatment for the several years (2,3).
Mannitol is the most popular pharmacological treatment hyperosmotic agent used in post-traumatic brain damage (4). It has been suggested that mannitol, by creating an osmotic gradient between the brain tissue and plasma, leads the edema fluid to flow into vascular bed (5). In addition, by producing hemodilution and red cell deformity, mannitol increases blood flow to the tissues and reduces cerebrospinal fluid release from the choroids plexus (6,7). Another effective methods for decreasing neural damage due to the increased intracranial pressure is the external ventricular drainage by the insertion of a catheter directly into the lateral ventricles (8). Barbiturates and hyperventilation may also be used for a limited period of time, and use of steroids as a membrane stabilizer is still under investigation (9,10).
In spite of all the treatment modalities mentioned above, treatment of traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains as a challenging problem. In recent years, there have been tendencies to use hypertonic saline for treatment of brain edema and neuronal damage due to its safety advantages over mannitol (10,11). However, the most appropriate osmotherapeutic agent is still need to be determined.
Magnesium sulfate is a noncompetitive inhibitor of the N-methyl-D aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors and ion channels in the brain, providing protective effect on blood brain barrier in experimental models (12). It has been reported that magnesium improves functional outcome following blood brain barrier disruption and decrease brain edema (13). Studies on the effect of magnesium or hypertonic saline in experimental models commonly applied intraperitoneal or intra-arterial way of drug administration (13,14). However, the efficacy of intraventricular hypertonic saline and magnesium on brain cell damage in severe head injury has not been evaluated yet. In the present study, we compared the direct intraventricular effects of hypertonic saline a well-known osmotic agent decreasing intracranial pressure and magnesium sulphate an NMDA receptor inhibitor that has recently-shown to have neuroprotective effects on injured neuron cells after brain trauma in rats.
Materials and Methods
Study Design and Animals
This was an experimental study in which 18 male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 250-300 gr were used. The rats were housed in standard plastic cages on sawdust bedding in an air-conditioned room at 22±1 °C. Standard rat food and tap water were given ad libitum before and after the experiment. Eighteen rats were divided into three groups each containing six rats: control group (C), trauma+magnesium (TM) group, and trauma+hypertonic (TH) saline group.
The animal experiments and procedures were performed in accordance with national guidelines for the use and care of laboratory animals. The study protocol was approved by Yeditepe University Animal Care and Use Committee (13.04.2012/263).
Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury Model
The blunt head trauma model of Feeney were modified and used to induce brain injury in rats. Following anesthesia with xylazine (10 mg/kg, Rompun 2%, Bayer, İstanbul, Turkey) and ketamine (100 mg/kg, Ketalar, Parke Davis/Eczacıbaşı, İstanbul, Turkey), rats were placed in a stereotaxic frame (Stoelting Co-Stellar Cat No.51400, USA) bregma was marked as the reference point. Approximately 1 cm incision was made on the sagittal plane reaching the skull by using a dentist burr, centering 2.5 mm laterally on the right and 2.5 mm posteriorly. A circular bone flap of 6 mm diameter was excised. After replacement of metallic piece at the same diameter, a 10 g weight was dropped by free falling from a glass tube with inner diameter 8 mm at 50 cm height targeting the piece placed on the brain. Five minutes after the trauma, a single dose (10 µL) of isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl), magnesium sulphate, and hypertonic saline (23.4% NaCl) was applied intraventricularly into the control, magnesium, and hypertonic saline groups, respectively. After this procedure, skin was covered by interrupted sutures, and rats were put on homeothermic blanket system until awake and replaced in their cage. All of the rats decapitated at the 24th hour after the procedure.
Blood samples were taken from the femoral artery before cerebral injury procedure and after 24 hours to determine sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, magnesium, and hematocrit levels.
Histopathological Evaluation
Hippocampus and cortex were dissected for histopathologic evaluation. Nine of 5 µm thin sections of the brain were stained with cresyl violet and indocyanine green. Sections were processed for the TUNNEL assay using In-Situ Cell-Death Detection (POD) kits, (Roche, Penzberg, Germany) to reveal the degree of apoptosis under each experimental condition. The number of the injured neurons were counted (Figure 1).
Statistical Analysis
Study data were summarized by descriptive statistics (e.g., mean, standard deviation, frequency, percentage). The normality distribution of data was tested by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and post-hoc Tukey test were used to analyze the quantitative data that show normal distribution. In order to compare data without normal distribution, Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney U tests were used. Paired sample t-test was applied for repeated measurements. Statistical analysis was performed using the SPSS software package for Windows (Statistical Package for Social Sciences, version 15.0, SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). Statistical level of significance was set to p<0.05.
Results
Number of Injured Neurons
The mean number of injured neurons ranged between 76 and 199 in brain tissue sections stained with cresyl violet and between 13 and 23 in tissues stained with indocyanine green. The number of injured neurons calculated from each of nine thin sections of the brain stained with cresyl violet and indocyanine green are shown in Table 1. The number of injured neurons was significantly lowest in magnesium group compared to control and hypertonic saline groups at six sections stained with cresyl violet and at seven sections stained with indocyanine green (p<0.05 for all, Table 1) without any significant difference between control and hypertonic saline groups (p>0.05). This shows that although magnesium significantly decreases the number of injured neurons by brain injury, hypertonic saline had no effect on injured neurons.
Blood Analysis
Blood levels of sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, magnesium, and hematocrit levels showed no statistically significant difference between control, hypertonic saline and magnesium group before and 24 hours after the injury (p>0.05 for all). Sodium level, however, increased significantly after the injury in all groups (p<0.05 for all). Chloride also increased 24 hours after the injury compared to levels before the injury, but this increase reached statistical level of significance only in hypertonic saline group (p=0.019).
Discussion
TBI is a common emergency problem associated with high morbidity and mortality rates in intensive care unit. In the present study, we compared the direct intraventricular effects of hypertonic saline a well-known osmotic agent decreasing intracranial pressure and magnesium sulphate an NMDA receptor inhibitor that has recently-shown to have neuroprotective effects on injured neuron cells after brain trauma in rats. We have found that magnesium sulphate effectively decreased the number of injured neurons, whereas hypertonic saline had no direct effect on injured neurons in rats after TBI.
In cases of TBI, post-traumatic brain edema increases intracranial pressure, which may lead to death as well as disastrous complications. The post-traumatic brain edema may be divided into two groups according to its mechanism of formation: vasogenic and cytotoxic edema (2,15). Evidence from some studies using different models of head injury indicated that the blood-brain barrier leakage reaches a peak level within 30 min following trauma (2,10). This early and short term of edema is followed by a late edema that begins a few hours, and has a maximum effect between 3 and 8 days after trauma (2,9,10,16). It now becomes clear from the current literature that head injury is associated with biphasic pathophysiologic response, namely the first and short duration of vasogenic, and the second, the prolonged cytotoxic edema (1,2,10).
The TBI is managed by a multidisciplinary team usually with the aim of decreasing edema, maintenance of cerebral perfusion pressure and cerebral oxygenation (16). Hyperosmolar therapy using mannitol or hyperosmolar saline is a key intervention to overcome cerebral edema. Due to potential complications of mannitol such as intravascular volume depletion, hypotension, and hyperkalemia, hypertonic saline has been increasingly used as a safer alternative to mannitol (11,17,18). However, even though it has safety advantages over mannitol, there is a still controversy on the optimal dose or concentration of hypertonic saline. Furthermore, the effect of hyperosmolar agents is temporary and associated with sudden changes in serum sodium concentration and osmolarity (16). Therefore, alternative agents to decrease cerebral edema and intracerebral pressure permanently are needed in clinical practice.
N-methyl-D aspartic acid antagonists have been shown to be neuroprotective in animal models of brain injury and ischemia (19). Intracellular magnesium concentrations have been shown to decrease after TBI and this decline is attenuated by non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonists, with a corresponding improvement in neurological outcome. Browne et al. (20) demonstrated long-term neuroprotection of hippocampal tissue by an acute treatment with magnesium sulphate in a rat brain trauma model.
Imer et al. (14) reported that magnesium, alone or in combination with MK-801 reduces brain edema and restores permeability of blood brain barrier after experimental diffuse brain injury. Kaya et al. (21) also found that intraperitoneal magnesium sulfate administration limits the transient osmotic opening of the blood brain barrier. In another study from the same team, intraperitoneal magnesium was found to attenuate the blood-brain barrier permeability defect, which occurs in a rat model of diffuse TBI or in rat model and intraperitoneal sepsis (13,22).
In the present study, unlike previous studies that commonly used intraperitoneal rout, we gave magnesium sulphate and hypertonic saline via intraventricular route in order to demonstrate the direct action of these agents on injured neurons. We found that magnesium sulphate decreased the number of injured neurons, whereas hypertonic saline did not. Blood levels of electrolytes did not change after the injury except sodium level, which increased in all groups, and chloride level, which increased only in hypertonic saline group. It is known that hypertonic saline reduces cerebral edema and intracranial pressure (11,16,18). On the other hand, it has no known direct effect on injured neurons by brain trauma. Therefore, it is not surprising that in the present study, where only the number of neurons but not intracranial pressure was evaluated, hypertonic saline seems ineffective for TBI. However, magnesium plays an important role in the conduction of the nervous system via a voltage-gated antagonist action at the NMDA receptor. Therefore it has neuroprotective effect as shown in previous studies (19,20). Our findings confirm neuroprotective effect of magnesium sulphate in TBI model by decreasing the number of the injured cells while hypertonic saline had no direct effect on injured neural tissue.
The main limitations of the present study were the small sample size per study group, the use rat brain trauma model, which does not reflect the complexity of clinical head injury and limited applicability of the doses and concentration of therapeutic agents used in rats to human subjects (23). Thus, our findings should be confirmed by large-scale clinical studies with various doses and application routes of magnesium sulphate and hypertonic saline.
In conclusion, intraventricular magnesium, but not hypertonic saline, is effective in reduction of injured neuron count in rat TBI model. On this basis, further clinical prospective studies are needed to evaluate the use of magnesium in the management of patients with TBI.
Ethics
Ethics Committee Approval: Yeditepe University Animal Care and Use Committee. Informed Consent: Yeditepe University Animal Care and Use Committee (13.04.2012/263).
Peer-review: External and Internal peer-reviewed.
Authorship Contributions
Surgical and Medical Practices: T.K., N.K., M.İ., B.Y., Concept: N. K., M.İ., Design: N.K., M.İ., Data Collection or Processing: N.K., M.İ., Ö.K., S.B., Analysis or Interpretation: N.K., Literature Search: N.K., E.Ç., A.Ç., Writing: N.K., M.İ.
Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest was declared by the authors.
Financial Disclosure: The authors declared that this study received no financial support.