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Measurements of cerebral microvascular blood flow, oxygenation, and morphology in a mouse model of whole-brain irradiation-induced cognitive impairment by two-photon microscopy and optical coherence tomography: evidence for microvascular injury in the cerebral white matter.

Baoqiang LiAndriy YabluchanskiyStefano TarantiniSrinivasa Rao AlluIkbal Şencan-EğilmezJi LengMohammed Ali H AlfadhelJason E PorterBuyin FuChongzhao RanSefik Evren ErdenerDavid A BoasSergei A VinogradovWilliam E SonntagAnna CsiszarZoltan UngvariSava Sakadžić
Published in: GeroScience (2023)
Whole-brain irradiation (WBI, also known as whole-brain radiation therapy) is a mainstay treatment modality for patients with multiple brain metastases. It is also used as a prophylactic treatment for microscopic tumors that cannot be detected by magnetic resonance imaging. WBI induces a progressive cognitive decline in ~ 50% of the patients surviving over 6 months, significantly compromising the quality of life. There is increasing preclinical evidence that radiation-induced injury to the cerebral microvasculature and accelerated neurovascular senescence plays a central role in this side effect of WBI. To better understand this side effect, male C57BL/6 mice were first subjected to a clinically relevant protocol of fractionated WBI (5 Gy, two doses per week, for 4 weeks). Nine months post the WBI treatment, we applied two-photon microscopy and Doppler optical coherence tomography to measure capillary red-blood-cell (RBC) flux, capillary morphology, and microvascular oxygen partial pressure (PO 2 ) in the cerebral somatosensory cortex in the awake, head-restrained, WPI-treated mice and their age-matched controls, through a cover-glass-sealed chronic cranial window. Thanks to the extended penetration depth with the fluorophore - Alexa680, measurements of capillary blood flow properties (e.g., RBC flux, speed, and linear density) in the cerebral subcortical white matter were enabled. We found that the WBI-treated mice exhibited a significantly decreased capillary RBC flux in the white matter. WBI also caused a significant reduction in capillary diameter, as well as a large (although insignificant) reduction in segment density at the deeper cortical layers (e.g., 600-700 μm), while the other morphological properties (e.g., segment length and tortuosity) were not obviously affected. In addition, we found that PO 2 measured in the arterioles and venules, as well as the calculated oxygen saturation and oxygen extraction fraction, were not obviously affected by WBI. Lastly, WBI was associated with a significant increase in the erythrocyte-associated transients of PO 2 , while the changes of other cerebral capillary PO 2 properties (e.g., capillary mean-PO 2 , RBC-PO 2 , and InterRBC-PO 2 ) were not significant. Collectively, our findings support the notion that WBI results in persistent cerebral white matter microvascular impairment, which likely contributes to the WBI-induced brain injury and cognitive decline. Further studies are warranted to assess the WBI-induced changes in brain tissue oxygenation and malfunction of the white matter microvasculature as well.
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