Innate Immune Anti-Inflammatory Response in Human Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) is a common form of hemorrhagic stroke, with high mortality and morbidity. Pathophysiological mechanisms in sICH are poorly understood and treatments limited. Neuroinflammation driven by microglial-macrophage activation contributes to brain damage post-sIC...

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Veröffentlicht in:Stroke (1970) 2021-11, Vol.52 (11), p.3613-3623
Hauptverfasser: Shtaya, Anan, Bridges, Leslie R., Williams, Rebecca, Trippier, Sarah, Zhang, Liqun, Pereira, Anthony C., Nicoll, James A.R., Boche, Delphine, Hainsworth, Atticus H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) is a common form of hemorrhagic stroke, with high mortality and morbidity. Pathophysiological mechanisms in sICH are poorly understood and treatments limited. Neuroinflammation driven by microglial-macrophage activation contributes to brain damage post-sICH. We aim to test the hypothesis that an anti-inflammatory (repair) process occurs in parallel with neuroinflammation in clinical sICH. We performed quantitative analysis of immunohistochemical markers for microglia and macrophages (Iba1, CD68, TMEM119, CD163, and CD206) in brain tissue biospecimens 1 to 12 days post-sICH and matched control cases. In a parallel, prospective group of patients, we assayed circulating inflammatory markers (CRP [C-reactive protein], total white cell, and monocyte count) over 1 to 12 days following sICH. In 27 supratentorial sICH cases (n=27, median [interquartile range] age: 59 [52–80.5], 14F/13M) all microglia-macrophage markers increased post-sICH, relative to control brains. Anti-inflammatory markers (CD163 and CD206) were elevated alongside proinflammatory markers (CD68 and TMEM119). CD163 increased progressively post-sICH (15.0-fold increase at 7–12 days, P
ISSN:0039-2499
1524-4628
1524-4628
DOI:10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.034673