The objective of the study was to explore whether hypoglycemic brain d
amage is affected by superimposed acidosis. To that end, animals with
insulin-induced hypoglycemic coma, defined in terms of a negative DC p
otential shift, massive release of K+, or cellular uptake of Ca2+, wer
e exposed to excessive hypercapnia (PaCO2 similar to 200 or similar to
300 mm Hg) during the last 25 min of the 30-min coma period. Animals
were allowed to survive for 7 days before their brains were fixed by p
erfusion, and the cell damage was assessed by light microscopy. Other
animals were analyzed with respect to changes in extracellular pH (pH(
e)) or extracellular K+ or Ca(2+)concentrations (K-e(+) and Ca-e(2+),
respectively), The total CO2 content (TCO2) was also measured to allow
derivation of intracellular pH (pH(i)). The increase in PaCO2 to 190
+/- 15 and 312 +/- 23 mm Hg(means +/- SD) reduced the pH, from a prede
polarization value of similar to 7.4 and a postdepolarization value (a
fter the first 5 min of coma) of similar to 7.3 to 6.8 and 6.7, respec
tively. The corresponding mean pH(i) values were 6.7 and 6.5. The hype
rcapnia did not alter the K-e(+), which rose to 50-60 mM at the onset
of hypoglycemic coma, but it increased the Ca2+, from similar to 0.05
to 0.10-0.16 mM. Normocapnic animals with induced hypoglycemic coma of
30-min duration showed the expected neuronal lesions in the neocortex
, hippocampus, and caudoputamen. Hypercapnia clearly aggravated this d
amage, particularly in the caudoputamen, subiculum, and CA1 region of
the hippocampus, and caused additional damage to cells in the CA3 regi
on and piriform cortex. A rise in CO2 tension from similar to 200 to 3
00 mm Hg did not further aggravate the damage. The results thus demons
trate that relative moderate acidosis aggravates damage that is believ
ed to be mostly neuronal, sparing glia cells and vascular tissue.