Cerebral ischemia is one of the most common neurological insults. Many pathological events are undoubtedly triggered by ischemia, but only recently has it become accepted that ischemic cell injury arises from a complex interaction between multiple biochemical cascades. Tissue acidosis is a well established feature of ischemic brain tissue, but its role in ischemic neuropathology is still not fully understood. Within the last few years, new evidence has challenged the historically negative view of acidosis and suggests that it may play more of a beneficial role than previously thought. This review reintroduces the concept of acidosis to ischemic brain injury and presents some new perspectives on its neuroprotective potential. Key Words: Ischemia-infarction-Lactic acidosis-Excitotoxicity-Hippocampus-Selective neuronal necrosis -Energy metabolism. Experimental work aimed at understanding ischemic brain injury has highlighted numerous biochemical events that may mediate cell damage. Among these, tissue acidosis has received considerable attention. The history of the acidotic concept in ischemia research forms somewhat of an arch. A number of decades ago, cerebral acidosis was shown first to be a correlate of gross ischemic brain damage and was viewed later as a cause. At the height of interest in this topic, acidosis was considered among the principal mechanisms by which ischemic damage occurs (Myers, 1979;Siesjo, 1988~). Even so, it was clear that "cerebral ischemia" was not a single disease but any insult that involved a partial or complete reduction in cerebral blood flow. Various animal models of both focal and global ischemia have been widely used to study ischemic injury, but the question of whether tissue acidosis satisfactorily explains or even contributes to all forms of ischemic brain injury has never been formally addressed.Though acidosis is generally believed to underlie cerebral infarction, mounting evidence has suggested that acidosis does not contribute to the selective neuronal necrosis that occurs after transient ischemia or in the penumbra of developing infarcts. Not surprisingly, the earlier bias toward acidosis as a neurotoxic mechanism has waned. In this review, we briefly examine the evolution of the acidosis concept. We then focus on a recent and surprising series of in vitro observations suggesting that moderate acidosis may actually play a neuroprotective role during ischemia. We then discuss a striking and paradoxical implication of these data regarding the time course and possible mediators of selective neuronal injury following ischemia.
THE TRADITIONAL BELIEF IN THE ACIDOTIC ROUTE OF ISCHEMIC DAMAGESupported by varying degrees of experimental evidence, many distinct mechanisms have been proposed to explain ischemic brain injury; of these, the concept of acidotic damage is perhaps the oldest. Early work suggested that metabolic acidosis, caused by continued glycolysis, was responsible for the severe tissue disruption seen in the postmortem brain (Friede and van Houten, 1961). D...