Address for correspondence: Ann M. Marini, Departments of Neurology and Neuroscience, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, U.S.A.
Advanced age is associated with physiological changes, such
as cerebral autoregulation dysfunction, atrial fibrillation,
reduced cerebral blood flow, elevated blood pressure, and other
changes. Stroke-related dementia is associated with brain loss
principally due to strokes, and neuropathological examination
of the brains of old people shows a direct correlation between
the extent of brain loss and dementia. However, the exact mechanism
of the age related vulnerability to hypoxic-ischemic neuronal
injury remains unknown. The majority of synapses in the brain
use excitatory amino acids as their neurotransmitter. Glutamate,
a major endogenous excitatory amino acid required for normal
physiological excitation, is also involved in the pathophysiology
of hypoxic-ischemic neuronal injury. The
N-methyl-d-aspartate
(NMDA) glutamate receptor subtype plays a major role in mediating
hypoxic-ischemic neuronal injury. NMDA receptors also mediate
adaptive responses important for synaptic plasticity. This report
explores the possible role of synaptic activity as a protective
mechanism against neuronal cell death. Specifically, the role
of NMDA receptors in neuronal plasticity by upregulating a survival
pathway is discussed. Loss of a neuronal population that uses
glutamate as its neurotransmitter leads to a loss of activity
on the postsynaptic neurons or synaptic deprivation. Deprivation
of excitatory amino acids on the postsynaptic neurons results
in the failure of activity-dependent induced intrinsic survival
pathways induced by NMDA receptors. The loss of neuroprotective
intrinsic survival pathways increases the vulnerability of these
neurons to more hypoxic-ischemic neuronal damage. Since cerebral
infarction is also age related, this hypothesis provides a plausible
explanation of how we become more vulnerable to hypoxic-ischemic
neuronal injury as a function of age.