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The Journal of pediatrics · Aug 2000
Increases in bcl-2 protein in cerebrospinal fluid and evidence for programmed cell death in infants and children after severe traumatic brain injury.
- R S Clark, P M Kochanek, P D Adelson, M J Bell, J A Carcillo, M Chen, S R Wisniewski, K Janesko, M J Whalen, and S H Graham.
- Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
- J. Pediatr. 2000 Aug 1;137(2):197-204.
ObjectivesTo determine whether bcl-2, a protein that inhibits apoptosis, would be increased in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in infants and children after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to examine the association of bcl-2 concentration with clinical variables.Study DesignBcl-2 was measured in CSF from 23 children (aged 2 months-16 years) with severe TBI and from 19 children without TBI or meningitis (control subjects) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. CSF oligonucleosome concentration was also determined as a marker of DNA degradation. Brain samples from 2 patients undergoing emergent decompressive craniectomies were analyzed for bcl-2 with Western blot and for DNA fragmentation with TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl-transferase mediated biotin-dUTP nick-end labeling).ResultsCSF bcl-2 concentrations were increased in patients with TBI versus control subjects (P =.01). Bcl-2 was increased in patients with TBI who survived versus those who died (P =.02). CSF oligonucleosome concentration tended to be increased after TBI (P =.07) and was not associated with bcl-2. Brain tissue samples showed an increase in bcl-2 in patients with TBI versus adult brain bank control samples and evidence of DNA fragmentation within cells with apoptotic morphology.ConclusionsBcl-2 may participate in the regulation of cell death after TBI in infants and children. The increase in bcl-2 seen in patients who survived is consistent with a protective role for this anti-apoptotic protein after TBI.
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