cerebral blood flow Flashcards

blood brain barrier: define the blood brain barrier and explain its significance

1
Q

why is there a BBB

A

activity of neurones is highly sensitive to composition of local environment; CNS must be protected from fluctuations in composition of blood (homeostasis key for brain)

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2
Q

what level is BBB

A

level of CNS capillaries

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3
Q

types of capillaries and relative leakiness

A

continous (moderate), fenestrated (leaky), sinusoid (very leaky)

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4
Q

normal exchange across capillary wall: amount and mode

A

most plasma leaks out of blood vessels every 9 hours through pores/clefts between endothelial cells

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5
Q

when does vessel BBB properties increase

A

in deeper vessels

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6
Q

vessel BBB property (junctions) and reason

A

extensive tight junctions at endothelial cell-cell contacts, massively reducing solute and fluid leak across the capillary wall

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7
Q

cardiac muscle capillary vs brain capillary

A

both continuous, but brain capillary has very little transcellular vesicular transport

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8
Q

interendothelial junctions: peripheral capillaries vs BBB capillaries

A

number of tight junctions between endothelaial cells, so clefts are more restricted

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9
Q

peripheral capillaries vs BBB capillaries: pericyte coverage and astrocytes

A

dense pericyte coverage in BBB capillaries (pericytes maintain capillary integrity and function), more astrocytes also

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10
Q

significance of tight junctions and specific membrane transporters in BBB capillaries

A

control exchange of hydrophilic substances e.g. glucose, amino acids, some antibiotics and toxins etc.

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11
Q

effect of BBB on blood-borne infectious agent entry to CNS tissue; impact of loss of BBB

A

reduced; can help with clearing some infections by allowing immune cells access

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12
Q

how do lipophilic molecules cross BBB into CNS

A

passive diffusion down concentration gradient

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13
Q

how do hydrophilic substances cross BBB into CNS (water, glucose, amino acids, electrolytes)

A

water: aquaporin (AQP1, AQP4) channels; glucose: GLUT-1 transporter proteins; amino acids: 3 different transporters; electrolytes: specific transporter systems

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14
Q

principal feature of circumventricular organs

A

close to ventricles with capillaries that lack BBB properties

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15
Q

characteristics of capillaries and ependymal cells in circumventricular organs

A

leaky, fenestrated capillaries but tighter ependymal lining, so sample plasma, allwoing but limiting exchange into CSF

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16
Q

2 examples of circumventricular organs and function

A

posterior pituitary and median eminence; secrete hormones

17
Q

function of circumventricular organ area postrema

A

samples plasma for toxins, inducing vomiting

18
Q

other functions of other circumventricular organs

A

sensing electrolytes, regulate water intake

19
Q

when does BBB break down (4 cases)

A

inflammation, infection, trauma, stroke

20
Q

clinical importance of BBB in pharmacology

A

entry of drug into brain (good or bad)

21
Q

effect of “old-fashioned” antihistamine H1 blockers on BBB

A

hydrophobic so could cross BBB by diffusion, making people drousy (sold as sleep aids)

22
Q

effect of second-generation antihistamine H1 blockers on BBB

A

polar so do not readily cross BBB and cause drowsiness

23
Q

how can Parkinson’s disease be treated, and impact of BBB

A

elevated dopamine levels in brain, but dopamine cannot cross BBB

24
Q

what is used to allow dopamine into the brain

A

prodrug L-DOPA can cross BBB via amino acid transporter, then converted to dopamine in brain by DOPA decarboxylase

25
Q

problem with using L-DOPA to treat Parkinson’s disease, and solution

A

most converted to dopamine peripherally, so less available to access brain; co-administered with carbidopa which inhibits DOPA decarboxylase, but cannot cross BBB, so doesn’t affect conversion of L-DOPA to dopamine in brain