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Course: Health and medicine > Unit 3
Lesson 3: Stroke- What is a stroke?
- Cerebral blood supply: Part 1
- Cerebral blood supply: Part 2
- What is a stroke?
- Risk factors for stroke
- Ischemic stroke
- Hemorrhagic strokes
- Ischemic core and penumbra
- The ischemic cascade in stroke
- Blood brain barrier and vasogenic edema
- Post stroke inflammation
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Blood brain barrier and vasogenic edema
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Want to join the conversation?
- Does anything else that leaks out into the brain tissue besides water and proteins affect the brain? Or do water and proteins just have the most effect and all the other things floating around in the blood stream just are not really important.(4 votes)
- 2nd one. Almost everything comes out but water & proteins have the most effect.(3 votes)
- Have we ever gotten pictures of arteries in the brain?(2 votes)
- Brain angiography, photoacoustic imaging, and transcranial optical vascular imaging (TOVI) are all ways to see the vessels in the bain(4 votes)
- What types of supportive care is usually provided to care for patients to prevent serious vasogenic edema?(1 vote)
- For patients with severe edema, dialysis is usually performed to pull fluid off of them due to poor fluid regulation taking place in their tissues. Patients can also be given diuretics to help them urinate out more fluid. You have to be careful when treating these patients due to the potential risk of throwing their electrolytes out of balance. Na, K, and Cl/Ca have to be monitored closely during treatment to prevent organ failure and arrhythmias.(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] This is a
really, really zoomed-in schematic view of neurons
and their supporting cells in the brain, and we know that without enough oxygen, let's say there's a clot right about here, and that's reduced the
blood flow to this area enough to cause a stroke here, without enough oxygen, neurons
can start to break down as a result of a process
called the Ischemic Cascade, so that's obviously not good,
our neurons breaking down, but to sort of add insult to injury here, there's actually a few
other events that happen after neurons start breaking
down during this stroke. Let's look at these subsequent events. We know that in the
initial part of a stroke, a few minutes without oxygen will cause our neurons to start
breaking down and dying off. We know that, but later, around a few hours later, certain components of the blood
vessels that serve the area, they start to get broken down, as well, so let me actually zoom in
on this blood vessel here. Let's look at a close-up. You might have heard of the
blood-brain barrier, the BBB. It's essentially this
extra layer of security that separates what's inside
your blood stream, for example, any drugs or harmful little toxins. The blood-brain barrier separates what's inside your blood stream from your central nervous
system tissue, out here, and this is to make sure you don't get any weird and not-so-wonderful infections or any brain injury from things traveling in your bloodstream. What makes up your BBB? What makes up your blood-brain barrier? I'll just briefly describe it. It's partially composed
of endothelial cells, which are these neat
little cells here that line the inside of your capillaries, so you can see they're
really close together here to help prevent unwanted leakages of any little substances, then there's the basal lamina, which is sort of the
endothelial cells underlay. It's pretty thick, and it also helps to separate stuff in the
blood from stuff in the CNS. Then there are these tight junctions, and I'll draw some of these in here. Let me just draw in some
of these tight junctions. These are little connector proteins that really tightly seal up any space between our endothelial cells, and that further restricts
any unwanted molecules or substances from getting into the CNS. These tight junctions will
prevent them from slipping between your blood vessel
cells, these endothelial cells. The last component of
the blood-brain barrier that I should probably mention
are these astrocyte processes here, these astrocyte endfeet, and they actually don't have
too much of a structural role in the blood-brain barrier, but they do provide some nourishment to these endothelial cells, so you could say they help maintain the blood-brain barrier, in a way. So why am I telling you all of this? Why am I telling you this stuff about the blood-brain barrier? Because about four to six
hours after infarction, after you lose your oxygen
supply to this part of the brain, your blood-brain barrier
starts to break down, and two of the major reasons this happens is because of ischemia in the area, and because of an inflammatory reaction that's going on post-stroke. So what happens? The combined result is
that your endothelial cells start to get a little bit leakier, and this basal lamina loses its ability to restrict some molecules, so it gets a little leakier, too. And really importantly,
these tight junctions stop being true to their name, they loosen up a little bit, and they also become leaky, so you can imagine that
this is just a disaster. Everything is supposed
to be nice and tight, and now things are pretty out of whack. Let's see what ends up
happening because of this. Proteins and water from
within the capillaries, within the bloodstream, because there's often still
a tiny bit of flow happening, proteins and water start
to leak out at will. What do you think is
going to end up happening now to the brain tissue here? Now the extra-cellular space here is going to get a little bit flooded with proteins and water, right? This so-called vasogenic edema, vasogenic means originating
from blood vessels, this vasogenic edema adds
to the cytotoxic edema that's already happening in the area, and that just worsens the swelling of this part of the brain after stroke. Why is this important? For one, swollen ischemic brain can't really carry out
too many of its functions, so we want to minimize
the time spent swollen as much as possible, and for two, it can
result in a mass effect, which is where the swollen
brain area starts to push on, or displace, surrounding brain tissue. Unfortunately I'm not
referring to the excellent video game series called Mass Effect here, I am referring to a
physiological mass effect. Let me show you one of
the most severe things that can happen with brain swelling. You can develop what is
called brain herniation. This is where the brain
swelling gets so bad that a bit of brain gets
pushed totally out of position. Say this bit of brain
here gets pushed over toward the other side, or say this bit of brain
here gets pushed down through this part of your skull where your spinal cord exits your head. Both of these are known as
herniation of brain tissue, and they're both often fatal, so we don't like brain swelling at all. What sort of timeline
are we looking at, then, for this swelling? The swelling that occurs as the result of this vasogenic edema,
it tends to get worse over a few days as more water and protein leak out of the blood vessels in the area, and it peaks at roughly three
to five days post-stroke, and then after that it slowly starts to resolve over the next few weeks as the protein and the
water slowly get reabsorbed back into the circulation. This, of course, is a good thing, and it brings the cerebral swelling down.