PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Surgery increases cell death and induces changes in gene expression compared with anesthesia alone in the developing piglet brain.

  • Kevin D Broad,
  • Go Kawano,
  • Igor Fierens,
  • Eridan Rocha-Ferreira,
  • Mariya Hristova,
  • Mojgan Ezzati,
  • Jamshid Rostami,
  • Daniel Alonso-Alconada,
  • Badr Chaban,
  • Jane Hassell,
  • Bobbi Fleiss,
  • Pierre Gressens,
  • Robert D Sanders,
  • Nicola J Robertson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173413
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. e0173413

Abstract

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In a range of animal species, exposure of the brain to general anaesthesia without surgery during early infancy may adversely affect its neural and cognitive development. The mechanisms mediating this are complex but include an increase in brain cell death. In humans, attempts to link adverse cognitive development to infantile anaesthesia exposure have yielded ambiguous results. One caveat that may influence the interpretation of human studies is that infants are not exposed to general anaesthesia without surgery, raising the possibility that surgery itself, may contribute to adverse cognitive development. Using piglets, we investigated whether a minor surgical procedure increases cell death and disrupts neuro-developmental and cognitively salient gene transcription in the neonatal brain. We randomly assigned neonatal male piglets to a group who received 6h of 2% isoflurane anaesthesia or a group who received an identical anaesthesia plus 15 mins of surgery designed to replicate an inguinal hernia repair. Compared to anesthesia alone, surgery-induced significant increases in cell death in eight areas of the brain. Using RNAseq data derived from all 12 piglets per group we also identified significant changes in the expression of 181 gene transcripts induced by surgery in the cingulate cortex, pathway analysis of these changes suggests that surgery influences the thrombin, aldosterone, axonal guidance, B cell, ERK-5, eNOS and GABAA signalling pathways. This suggests a number of novel mechanisms by which surgery may influence neural and cognitive development independently or synergistically with the effects of anaesthesia.