Institution: | 2 Louisiana State University, Department of Physiology, LSU Medical Center, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA a LSU Eye Center, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA |
Abstract: | Newborn mammals, compared to adults, are extremely resistant to the CNS effects of hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO) induced by excessive generation of reactive oxygen species. This tolerance to HBO may be related to either physiological responses or the chemical characteristics of the immature brain, including a low cerebral blood flow and energy metabolism and a low concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids. In adult mammals the main protective mechanism against CNS oxygen toxicity, besides endogenous antioxidants, is a transient HBO-induced cerebral vasoconstriction. How cerebral vasculature reacts to HBO in the immature brain is not known. We present indirect evidence suggesting that HBO in newborn rats induces a persistent cerebral vasoconstriction concurrently with a severe and maintained reduction in ventilation. It is speculated that the outcome of these physiologic responses to hyperoxic exposures may be: (a) extension of tolerance to both CNS and pulmonary oxygen poisoning; (b) creation of a profound hypoxic-ischemic condition in vulnerable neural structures: and (c) impairement of the circulatory and ventilatory responses to hypoxic stimuli on return to air consequent development of a secondary hypoxic-ischemic condition. These hypothetical pre- and post-HBO events may set the stage for the development of some delayed neurological disorders, including the retinopathy of prematurity and the retardation of brain development in fetuses or prematurely-born infants subjected to oxygen therapy. |