Despite improvements in perinatal practice during the past several decades, the incidence of cerebral palsy (CP), most of them of antenatal origin, has remained essentially unchanged. Currently there is no way to diagnose human fetal brain injury directly and our understanding of cellular mechanisms causing CP is very limited. To study mechanisms of brain injury resulting in cerebral palsy, a clinically relevant rabbit model of fetal hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) has been developed in our laboratory that produces motor deficits in newborn kits. Given our recent ability to prognosticate fetal injury resulting in postnatal motor deficits using in vivo neuroimaging, this proposal investigates cellular and molecular mechanisms of injury resulting in postnatal motor deficits. Immediate brain response to H-I in this model has been found to be determine postnatal motor deficits thus implying a critical role of oxidative mechanism of injury, predominant at this phase of H-I injury. Free radicals have been implicated as a key mechanism of brain injury after H-I, causing """"""""reperfusion injury"""""""" from a cascade of subsequent reactions. Our central hypothesis is that the interaction of free radicals and antioxidants in the developing brain determines the degree of brain injury. The individual fetus brain response can now be assessed non-invasively using diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and associated with postnatal outcome. The proposal investigates whether immediate brain response, assessed by the ADC and predictive of postnatal outcome, is associated with concomitant excess free radical production, mitochondrial dysfunction, and consequent cell death and apoptosis. The concept of maturation dependent interaction of free radicals and antioxidants will be tested by assessing ADC response and markers of oxidative stress on two gestational ages of rabbit - preterm (79% gestation) and near term (90% gestation) and in brain regions with less vulnerable to H-I cortex and more vulnerable basal ganglia, thalamus and brainstem.
In Specific Aim 1 we will determine whether the severity of brain injury, as assessed by ADC immediately after hypoxia-ischemia, can predict the extent of motor deficits postnatally.
In Specific Aim 2 we will determine whether oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are responsible for brain injury after hypoxia-ischemia as assessed by ADC. The third Specific Aim will address feasibility and utility of the human fetal DWI to diagnose and prognosticate H-I brain injury and ensuing postnatal neurological deficits on patients with high risk of fetal H-I injury. The long term goal of this project is to develop DWI-based surrogate marker to diagnose and treat human fetal brain at the time of injury.

Public Health Relevance

This study is designed to use magnetic resonance imaging to improve our understanding of the fetal brain injury resulting in cerebral palsy and other motor deficits. Based on animal model data, this understanding has the potential to identify human fetuses-at-risk, early diagnose fetal brain injury and implement preventive or therapeutic strategies, ultimately reducing incidents and disabilities of cerebral palsy. ? ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
1R21NS062367-01A1
Application #
7590137
Study Section
Developmental Brain Disorders Study Section (DBD)
Program Officer
Hicks, Ramona R
Project Start
2008-09-30
Project End
2010-05-31
Budget Start
2008-09-30
Budget End
2009-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$166,797
Indirect Cost
Name
Northshore University Healthsystem
Department
Type
DUNS #
069490621
City
Evanston
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60201
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Prasad, P V (2015) Placental perfusion in uterine ischemia model as evaluated by dynamic contrast enhanced MRI. J Magn Reson Imaging 42:666-72
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Takada, Silvia Honda; Luo, Kehuan et al. (2015) Elevated spinal monoamine neurotransmitters after antenatal hypoxia-ischemia in rabbit cerebral palsy model. J Neurochem 132:394-402
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Jiang, Rugang; Derrick, Matthew et al. (2014) Functional correlates of central white matter maturation in perinatal period in rabbits. Exp Neurol 261:76-86
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Jiang, Rugang; Lin, Laixiang et al. (2014) Unmyelinated axon loss with postnatal hypertonia after fetal hypoxia. Ann Neurol 75:533-41
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Derrick, Matthew; Luo, Kehuan et al. (2012) Near-term fetal hypoxia-ischemia in rabbits: MRI can predict muscle tone abnormalities and deep brain injury. Stroke 43:2757-63
Derrick, Matthew; Englof, Ila; Drobyshevsky, Alexander et al. (2012) Intrauterine fetal demise can be remote from the inciting insult in an animal model of hypoxia-ischemia. Pediatr Res 72:154-60
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Luo, Kehuan; Derrick, Matthew et al. (2012) Motor deficits are triggered by reperfusion-reoxygenation injury as diagnosed by MRI and by a mechanism involving oxidants. J Neurosci 32:5500-9
Drobyshevsky, Alexander; Yu, Lei; Yang, Yirong et al. (2012) Antenatal insults modify newborn olfactory function by nitric oxide produced from neuronal nitric oxide synthase. Exp Neurol 237:427-34