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From:
Meir Weiss <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
St. John's University Cerebral Palsy List
Date:
Wed, 4 Jan 2006 14:23:32 -0500
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-----Original Message-----
From: [log in to unmask] [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of UCSD University Communications
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2006 11:18
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: UCSD-Laser Technique Sheds Light on Strokes

The following news release and any accompanying images can be accessed on the
web at: http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/science/smicrostrokes.asp
January 3, 2006

Media Contact: Sherry Seethaler, (858) 534-4656, [log in to unmask]
Comment:  David Kleinfeld, (858) 822-0342, [log in to unmask]

UCSD Laser Technique Sheds Light on Strokes A technique developed at the
University of California, San Diego that precisely creates and images blood
clots in the brain in real time could make it possible to understand the small
strokes implicated in many forms of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease.
The study, published this week in the early on-line edition of the journal
Public Library of Science Biology, represents a collaboration between the
research groups of David Kleinfeld, professor of physics at UCSD, and Patrick
Lyden, professor of neurosciences at UCSD's School of Medicine.  The paper will
appear in the print edition of the journal in February.
Using a laser to trigger the formation of individual blood clots in tiny
arteries of the brains of anesthetized rats, the researchers were able to
monitor the resulting changes in blood flow.  They say that their study provides
a way to understand small strokes common in elderly humans.  These strokes often
cause no immediate symptoms, but they are thought to contribute to dementia and
may ultimately cause larger strokes.
"Our technique makes it possible, for the first time, to precisely target
individual blood vessels to create a blood clot while causing very little
collateral damage," explained Kleinfeld.  "We can then follow, in real time, the
changes in blood flow in surrounding vessels that occur as a result of
the formation of a clot in one small artery of the brain."
"We know from MRI scans that small strokes are very common in the brains of
elderly patients," added Lyden.  "Such small strokes have been linked with
dementia, and may also put patients at risk for a major stroke.  The power of
the technique we describe in the paper is that it allows us to study the
response of the brain to stroke in a controlled way.  By understanding what
happens, we hope to learn how to prevent the major damage associated with
stroke."
In the study, the team members used tightly focused laser light to excite a dye
that they had injected into the bloodstream.  The excited dye reacted with
oxygen to form a free radical, which "nicked" the cells lining the blood vessel
at the target location, and triggered the natural blood clotting cascade.
Using two-photon fluorescence microscopy-a powerful imaging tool that uses brief
(less than one-trillionth of a second) laser pulses to peer below the surface of
the brain, the researchers snapped frames every second before and after the
formation of the blood clot.  They also measured blood flow in the arteries
upstream and downstream of the clot.  Remarkably, immediately following the
formation of the clot, blood flow downstream of the clot reversed itself.
"People tend to think of blood flow like a river," said Chris Schaffer, the lead
author on the paper, who was an assistant project scientist working with
Kleinfeld in physics at the time of the discovery.  "If you dam one tributary,
then everything downstream from there would be cut off.  However, we've found
that the more complicated topology of the blood vessels leads to the
counterintuitive result that blood flow in some downstream vessels reverses
direction to compensate for the blockage."
In the paper, the researchers discuss how this result can explain the
observation, by clinicians, that certain regions of the brain seem to be
protected from stroke.  These protected regions of the brain have networks of
vessels with extensive redundant connections.  In the case of a blockage, these
redundant connections permit blood to flow through alternate loops and be pushed
in the opposite direction below the clot, as observed in this study.  The
reversal prevents downstream regions of the brain from being starved of oxygen.
In addition to what the researchers could observe in real time, the technique
facilitates follow-up because the fluorescent molecules used to visualize blood
flow bind to injured places in the artery.
"Rather than having to tediously search for the targeted vessels using brain
sections, the fluorescence provides a kind of footprint that can be followed,"
said Beth Friedman, an associate project scientist working with Lyden in
neurosciences and a contributing author on the paper.  "Then you can look to see
if there have been biochemical changes in the region of the clot, or changes in
what genes are expressed, which is especially important to determine if an
intervention protects against damage from stroke."
Kleinfeld and Lyden attributed the advance to collaboration across traditional
disciplinary boundaries.
"Pat and I are coming from different worlds, but we had the same question at the
back of our minds," said Kleinfeld.
"Joining forces allowed us to crack a puzzle that either one of us couldn't
crack alone," added Lyden Other contributors to the study were Nozomi Nishimura,
Lee Schroeder and Philbert Tsai at UCSD and Ford Ebner at Vanderbilt University,
Nashville.
The research was supported by the David and Lucille Packard Foundation, the
Veteran's Affairs Medical Research Department, the National Institutes of
Health, the Burroughs Wellcome Fund and the National Science Foundation.
UCSD news on the web at: http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu

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