Postoperative cognitive dysfunction and neuroinflammation: Cardiac surgery and abdominal surgery are not the same

Publication date

2016-05

Authors

Hovens, Iris B
van Leeuwen, Barbara L
Mariani, Massimo A
Kraneveld, Aletta D.ISNI 000000038803088X
Schoemaker, Regien G

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a debilitating surgical complication, with cardiac surgery patients at particular risk. To gain insight in the mechanisms underlying the higher incidence of POCD after cardiac versus non-cardiac surgery, systemic and central inflammatory changes, alterations in intraneuronal pathways, and cognitive performance were studied after cardiac and abdominal surgery in rats. Male Wistar rats were subjected to ischemia reperfusion of the upper mesenteric artery (abdominal surgery) or the left coronary artery (cardiac surgery). Control rats remained naïve, received anesthesia only, or received thoracic sham surgery. Rats were subjected to affective and cognitive behavioral tests in postoperative week 2. Plasma concentrations of inflammatory factors, and markers for neuroinflammation (NGAL and microglial activity) and the BDNF pathway (BDNF, p38MAPK and DCX) were determined. Spatial memory was impaired after both abdominal and cardiac surgery, but only cardiac surgery impaired spatial learning and object recognition. While all surgical procedures elicited a pronounced acute systemic inflammatory response, NGAL and TNFα levels were particularly increased after abdominal surgery. Conversely, NGAL in plasma and the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus and microglial activity in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex on postoperative day 14 were increased after cardiac, but not abdominal surgery. Both surgery types induced hippocampal alterations in BDNF signaling. These results suggest that POCD after cardiac surgery, compared to non-cardiac surgery, affects different cognitive domains and hence may be more extended rather than more severe. Moreover, while abdominal surgery effects seem limited to hippocampal brain regions, cardiac surgery seems associated with more wide spread alterations in the brain.

Keywords

Postoperativec ognitive dysfunction, Surgery, Cardiac, Abdominal, Behavior, Cognition, Neuroinflammation, Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, Brain-derived neurotrophic factor, Neurogenesis, Taverne

Citation

Hovens, I B, van Leeuwen, B L, Mariani, M A, Kraneveld, A D & Schoemaker, R G 2016, 'Postoperative cognitive dysfunction and neuroinflammation : Cardiac surgery and abdominal surgery are not the same', Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, vol. 54, pp. 178-193. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2016.02.003