Papers

Basic information

Name OZAWA Hitoshi

Title

Identification of Brain Regions Activated by Sevoflurane and Propofol and Regional Changes in Gene Expression.

Author

Nobutaka Kamei,Shimpei Higo,Tomoki Mizuno,Keisuke Mori,Atsuhiro Sakamoto,Hitoshi Ozawa

Sole or Joint Author

 

Journal

Acta histochemica et cytochemica

Publisher

 

All Volumes

 

All Pages

 

Volume

55

Number

1

Starting Page

37

Ending Page

46

Publication Date

2022-02

Referee Paper

 

Invited Paper

 

Language

English

MISC Class

 

Publishing Type

Research paper (scientific journal)

ISSN

 

ID:DOI

10.1267/ahc.21-00091

ID:NAID

 

ID:PMID

 

URL

Description

General anesthetics have different efficacies and side effect incidences based on their mechanism of action. However, detailed comparative studies of anesthetics are incomplete. In this study, target brain regions and gene expression changes in these brain regions were determined for sevoflurane and propofol to understand the mechanisms that cause differences among anesthetics. Rats were anesthetized with sevoflurane or propofol for 1 hr, and brain regions with anesthesia-induced changes in neuronal activity were examined by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization for c-Fos. Among the identified target brain regions, gene expression analysis was performed in the habenula, the solitary nucleus and the medial vestibular nucleus from laser microdissected samples. Genes altered by sevoflurane and propofol were different and included genes involved in the incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting and emergence agitation, such as Egr1 and Gad2. GO enrichment analysis showed that the altered genes tended to be evenly distributed in all functional category. The detailed profiles of target brain regions and induced gene expression changes of sevoflurane and propofol in this study will provide a basis for analyzing the effects of each anesthetic agent and the risk of adverse events.

ID:JGlobalID

 

arXiv ID

 

Put Code of ORCID

 

DBLP ID

 

WekoID of OpenDepo