[
Abstract]
[
Full Text PDF] (in Japanese / 2664KB)
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J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 78(4): 345-358, 1977
Original article
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES ON PROLONGED CEREBRAL VASOSPASM
-ANALYSIS OF OXYHEMOGLOBIN INDUCED CEREBRAL VASOSPASM-
According to the Speden's method, a spirally cut strip of the basilar artery of a dog was mounted in a bath filled with artificial CSF, and vasoactivity of fresh and aged serum, whole blood and blood-CSF mixture upon the isolated artery were tested. Contraction of artery produced by serum was most obvious in the fresh sample and diminished quickly as aging continued. Thus serum aged over 4 days were essentially non-vasoactive. Also it was completely abolished by adding methysergide, a serotonin antagonist. On the other hand, vasoactivity found in supernatants of the incubated whole blood and blood-CSF mixture progressively increased as incubation continued, reaching its peak after approximately 7 days of incubation. When the aged whole blood or aged blood-CSF mixture, particularly the latter, was applied, a tonic tention superimposed with phasic contraction of the isolated artery developed and lasted for several hours. Contraction was further enhanced markedly under the hypoxic condition produced by the cessation of continuous O
2-supply into the reaction medium. Supernatants of blood-CSF mixture incubated for 7 days at 37 ℃ was passed through a column of sephadex G-100. Vasoactive substance existed specifically at the peak I I I which demonstrated positive ninhydrin reaction. When peak I I I, thus isolated, was introduced into the basal cistern of the dog marked vasospasm at the circle of Willis and basilar artery developed and lasted over 2 weeks. Further biochemical analysis of peak I I I using CM cellulose ion exchange resin and disc electrophoresis, demonstrated that the vasoactive property lay in the polypeptides closely allied to oxyhemoglobin or oxyhemoglobin itself.
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