Impact of daily high-dose caffeine exposure on developing white matter of the immature ovine brain
Anzari Atik,
Jeanie Cheong,
Richard Harding,
Sandra Rees,
Robert De Matteo
Mary Tolcos
Abstract
Background:
Caffeine is widely used to treat apnea of prematurity, but the standard dosing regimen is not always sufficient to prevent apnea. Before higher doses of caffeine can be used, their effects on the immature brain need to be carefully evaluated. Our aim was to determine the impact of daily high-dose caffeine administration on the developing white matter of the immature ovine brain.
Methods:
High-dose caffeine (25 mg/kg caffeine base loading dose; 20 mg/kg daily maintenance dose; n = 9) or saline (n = 8) were administered to pregnant sheep from 0.7 to 0.8 of term, equivalent to approximately 27–34 wk in humans. At 0.8 of term, the white and gray matter were assessed histologically and immunohistochemically.
Results:
Daily caffeine administration led to peak caffeine concentration of 32 mg/l in fetal plasma at 1 h, followed by a gradual decline, with no effects on mean arterial pressure and heart rate. Initial caffeine exposure led to transient, mild alkalosis in the fetus but did not alter oxygenation. At necropsy, there was no effect of daily high-dose caffeine on brain weight, oligodendrocyte density, myelination, axonal integrity, microgliosis, astrogliosis, apoptosis, or neuronal density.
Conclusion:
Daily high-dose caffeine administration does not appear to adversely affect the developing white matter at the microstructural level.
Pediatric Research (2014)76,54–63
doi:10.1038/pr.2014.55
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