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Dive into the research topics where Rasmus Aamand is active.

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Featured researches published by Rasmus Aamand.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2009

Generation of nitric oxide from nitrite by carbonic anhydrase: a possible link between metabolic activity and vasodilation.

Rasmus Aamand; Thomas Dalsgaard; Frank Jensen; Ulf Simonsen; Andreas Roepstorff; Angela Fago

In catalyzing the reversible hydration of CO2 to bicarbonate and protons, the ubiquitous enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA) plays a crucial role in CO2 transport, in acid-base balance, and in linking local acidosis to O2 unloading from hemoglobin. Considering the structural similarity between bicarbonate and nitrite, we hypothesized that CA uses nitrite as a substrate to produce the potent vasodilator nitric oxide (NO) to increase local blood flow to metabolically active tissues. Here we show that CA readily reacts with nitrite to generate NO, particularly at low pH, and that the NO produced in the reaction induces vasodilation in aortic rings. This reaction occurs under normoxic and hypoxic conditions and in various tissues at physiological levels of CA and nitrite. Furthermore, two specific inhibitors of the CO2 hydration, dorzolamide and acetazolamide, increase the CA-catalyzed production of vasoactive NO from nitrite. This enhancing effect may explain the known vasodilating effects of these drugs and indicates that CO2 and nitrite bind differently to the enzyme active site. Kinetic analyses show a higher reaction rate at high pH, suggesting that anionic nitrite participates more effectively in catalysis. Taken together, our results reveal a novel nitrous anhydrase enzymatic activity of CA that would function to link the in vivo main end products of energy metabolism (CO2/H+) to the generation of vasoactive NO. The CA-mediated NO production may be important to the correlation between blood flow and metabolic activity in tissues, as occurring for instance in active areas of the brain.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2013

The capillary dysfunction hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease

Leif Østergaard; Rasmus Aamand; Eugenio Gutiérrez-Jiménez; Yi-Ching L. Ho; Jakob Udby Blicher; Søren M. Madsen; Kartheeban Nagenthiraja; Rikke Beese Dalby; Kim Ryun Drasbek; Arne Møller; Hans Brændgaard; Kim Mouridsen; Sune Nørhøj Jespersen; Morten S. Jensen; Mark J. West

It is widely accepted that hypoperfusion and changes in capillary morphology are involved in the etiopathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD). This is difficult to reconcile with the hyperperfusion observed in young high-risk subjects. Differences in the way cerebral blood flow (CBF) is coupled with the local metabolic needs during different phases of the disease can explain this apparent paradox. This review describes this coupling in terms of a model of cerebral oxygen availability that takes into consideration the heterogeneity of capillary blood flow patterns. The model predicts that moderate increases in heterogeneity requires elevated CBF in order to maintain adequate oxygenation. However, with progressive increases in heterogeneity, the resulting low tissue oxygen tension will require a suppression of CBF in order to maintain tissue metabolism. The observed biphasic nature of CBF responses in preclinical AD and AD is therefore consistent with progressive disturbances of capillary flow patterns. Salient features of the model are discussed in the context of AD pathology along with potential sources of increased capillary flow heterogeneity.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2013

The role of the cerebral capillaries in acute ischemic stroke: the extended penumbra model

Leif Østergaard; Sune Nørhøj Jespersen; Kim Mouridsen; Irene Klærke Mikkelsen; Kristjana Ýr Jónsdóttir; Anna Tietze; Jakob Udby Blicher; Rasmus Aamand; Niels Hjort; Nina Iversen; Changsi Cai; Kristina D. Hougaard; Claus Z. Simonsen; Paul von Weitzel-Mudersbach; Boris Modrau; Kartheeban Nagenthiraja; Lars Ribe; Mikkel Bo Hansen; Susanne Lise Bekke; Martin Gervais Dahlman; Josep Puig; Salvador Pedraza; Joaquín Serena; T.-H. Cho; Susanne Siemonsen; Götz Thomalla; Jens Fiehler; Norbert Nighoghossian; Grethe Andersen

The pathophysiology of cerebral ischemia is traditionally understood in relation to reductions in cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, a recent reanalysis of the flow-diffusion equation shows that increased capillary transit time heterogeneity (CTTH) can reduce the oxygen extraction efficacy in brain tissue for a given CBF. Changes in capillary morphology are typical of conditions predisposing to stroke and of experimental ischemia. Changes in capillary flow patterns have been observed by direct microscopy in animal models of ischemia and by indirect methods in humans stroke, but their metabolic significance remain unclear. We modeled the effects of progressive increases in CTTH on the way in which brain tissue can secure sufficient oxygen to meet its metabolic needs. Our analysis predicts that as CTTH increases, CBF responses to functional activation and to vasodilators must be suppressed to maintain sufficient tissue oxygenation. Reductions in CBF, increases in CTTH, and combinations thereof can seemingly trigger a critical lack of oxygen in brain tissue, and the restoration of capillary perfusion patterns therefore appears to be crucial for the restoration of the tissue oxygenation after ischemic episodes. In this review, we discuss the possible implications of these findings for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of acute stroke.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2013

The role of the microcirculation in delayed cerebral ischemia and chronic degenerative changes after subarachnoid hemorrhage.

Leif Østergaard; Rasmus Aamand; Sanja Karabegovic; Anna Tietze; Jakob Udby Blicher; Irene Klærke Mikkelsen; Nina Iversen; Niels Jørgen Secher; Thorbjørn S Engedal; Mariam Anzabi; Eugenio Gutiérrez Jiménez; Changsi Cai; Klaus Ulrik Koch; Erhard Trillingsgaard Næss-Schmidt; Annette Obel; Niels Juul; Mads Rasmussen; Jens Christian Sørensen

The mortality after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is 50%, and most survivors suffer severe functional and cognitive deficits. Half of SAH patients deteriorate 5 to 14 days after the initial bleeding, so-called delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI). Although often attributed to vasospasms, DCI may develop in the absence of angiographic vasospasms, and therapeutic reversal of angiographic vasospasms fails to improve patient outcome. The etiology of chronic neurodegenerative changes after SAH remains poorly understood. Brain oxygenation depends on both cerebral blood flow (CBF) and its microscopic distribution, the so-called capillary transit time heterogeneity (CTH). In theory, increased CTH can therefore lead to tissue hypoxia in the absence of severe CBF reductions, whereas reductions in CBF, paradoxically, improve brain oxygenation if CTH is critically elevated. We review potential sources of elevated CTH after SAH. Pericyte constrictions in relation to the initial ischemic episode and subsequent oxidative stress, nitric oxide depletion during the pericapillary clearance of oxyhemoglobin, vasogenic edema, leukocytosis, and astrocytic endfeet swelling are identified as potential sources of elevated CTH, and hence of metabolic derangement, after SAH. Irreversible changes in capillary morphology and function are predicted to contribute to long-term relative tissue hypoxia, inflammation, and neurodegeneration. We discuss diagnostic and therapeutic implications of these predictions.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014

Capillary Transit Time Heterogeneity and Flow-Metabolism Coupling after Traumatic Brain Injury

Leif Østergaard; Thorbjørn S Engedal; Rasmus Aamand; Ronni Mikkelsen; Nina Iversen; Maryam Anzabi; Erhard Trillingsgaard Næss-Schmidt; Kim Ryun Drasbek; Vibeke Bay; Jakob Udby Blicher; Anna Tietze; Irene Klærke Mikkelsen; Brian Benjamin Hansen; Sune Nørhøj Jespersen; Niels Juul; Jens Sörensen; Mads Rasmussen

Most patients who die after traumatic brain injury (TBI) show evidence of ischemic brain damage. Nevertheless, it has proven difficult to demonstrate cerebral ischemia in TBI patients. After TBI, both global and localized changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) are observed, depending on the extent of diffuse brain swelling and the size and location of contusions and hematoma. These changes vary considerably over time, with most TBI patients showing reduced CBF during the first 12hours after injury, then hyperperfusion, and in some patients vasospasms before CBF eventually normalizes. This apparent neurovascular uncoupling has been ascribed to mitochondrial dysfunction, hindered oxygen diffusion into tissue, or microthrombosis. Capillary compression by astrocytic endfeet swelling is observed in biopsies acquired from TBI patients. In animal models, elevated intracranial pressure compresses capillaries, causing redistribution of capillary flows into patterns argued to cause functional shunting of oxygenated blood through the capillary bed. We used a biophysical model of oxygen transport in tissue to examine how capillary flow disturbances may contribute to the profound changes in CBF after TBI. The analysis suggests that elevated capillary transit time heterogeneity can cause critical reductions in oxygen availability in the absence of ‘classic’ ischemia. We discuss diagnostic and therapeutic consequences of these predictions.


NeuroImage | 2013

A NO way to BOLD? Dietary nitrate alters the hemodynamic response to visual stimulation.

Rasmus Aamand; Thomas Dalsgaard; Yi-Ching Lynn Ho; Arne Møller; Andreas Roepstorff; Torben E. Lund

Neurovascular coupling links neuronal activity to vasodilation. Nitric oxide (NO) is a potent vasodilator, and in neurovascular coupling NO production from NO synthases plays an important role. However, another pathway for NO production also exists, namely the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway. On this basis, we hypothesized that dietary nitrate (NO3-) could influence the brains hemodynamic response to neuronal stimulation. In the present study, 20 healthy male participants were given either sodium nitrate (NaNO3) or sodium chloride (NaCl) (saline placebo) in a crossover study and were shown visual stimuli based on the retinotopic characteristics of the visual cortex. Our primary measure of the hemodynamic response was the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response measured with high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (0.64×0.64×1.8 mm) in the visual cortex. From this response, we made a direct estimate of key parameters characterizing the shape of the BOLD response (i.e. lag and amplitude). During elevated nitrate intake, corresponding to the nitrate content of a large plate of salad, both the hemodynamic lag and the BOLD amplitude decreased significantly (7.0±2% and 7.9±4%, respectively), and the variation across activated voxels of both measures decreased (12.3±4% and 15.3±7%, respectively). The baseline cerebral blood flow was not affected by nitrate. Our experiments demonstrate, for the first time, that dietary nitrate may modulate the local cerebral hemodynamic response to stimuli. A faster and smaller BOLD response, with less variation across local cortex, is consistent with an enhanced hemodynamic coupling during elevated nitrate intake. These findings suggest that dietary patterns, via the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, may be a potential way to affect key properties of neurovascular coupling. This could have major clinical implications, which remain to be explored.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2014

Dietary nitrate facilitates an acetazolamide-induced increase in cerebral blood flow during visual stimulation

Rasmus Aamand; Yi-Ching Lynn Ho; Thomas Dalsgaard; Andreas Roepstorff; Torben E. Lund

The carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitor acetazolamide (AZ) is used routinely to estimate cerebrovascular reserve capacity in patients, as it reliably increases cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, the mechanism by which AZ accomplishes this CBF increase is not entirely understood. We recently discovered that CA can produce nitric oxide (NO) from nitrite, and that AZ enhances this NO production in vitro. In fact, this interaction between AZ and CA accounted for a large part of AZs vasodilatory action, which fits well with the known vasodilatory potency of NO. The present study aimed to assess whether AZ acts similarly in vivo in the human cerebrovascular system. Hence, we increased or minimized the dietary intake of nitrate in 20 healthy male participants, showed them a full-field flickering dartboard, and measured their CBF response to this visual stimulus with arterial spin labeling. Doing so, we found a significant positive interaction between the dietary intake of nitrate and the CBF modulation afforded by AZ during visual stimulation. In addition, but contrary to studies conducted in elderly participants, we report no effect of nitrate intake on resting CBF in healthy human participants. The present study provides in vivo support for an enhancing effect of AZ on the NO production from nitrite catalyzed by CA in the cerebrovascular system. Furthermore, our results, in combination with the results of other groups, indicate that nitrate may have significant importance to vascular function when the cerebrovascular system is challenged by age or disease.


Neuropharmacology | 2011

Enhancing effects of acetazolamide on neuronal activity correlate with enhanced visual processing ability in humans

Rasmus Aamand; Joshua Skewes; Arne Møller; Angela Fago; Andreas Roepstorff

Acetazolamide is a potent inhibitor of the reversible hydration of CO(2) catalyzed by the enzyme carbonic anhydrase and is commonly used to increase cerebral blood flow e.g. in order to estimate cerebrovascular reserve. However it is not known whether acetazolamide may positively affect the excitability of neurons in the brain in vivo or cortical processing abilities. To test these possibilities we intravenously administered a low dose (7 mg/kg) acetazolamide to volunteers who performed a demanding visual signal detection task while undergoing whole brain electroencephalographic examinations. Two groups were tested twice on the same task, while receiving acetazolamide or a saline treatment in between the two sessions. Our data indicate that, while the control group showed a decrease in global gamma (30-49 Hz) power across sessions, with no correlation to performance, the acetazolamide group showed increased global gamma power that strongly related to their performance in the signal detection task. This was accompanied by a decrease in the early part of the event related potential in the control group, a decrease not seen in the acetazolamide group. There were no significant differences in blood pressure, ventilation rate, or heart rate between the two groups. It is possible that the differences between the groups, observed in this study, are related to the enhancing effect of acetazolamide on the nitric oxide generation catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase, or to other actions of acetazolamide, e.g. opening of Ca(2+) activated K(+) channels and inhibition of Ca(2+) channels.


NeuroImage | 2019

Rapid solution of the Bloch-Torrey equation in anisotropic tissue: Application to dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI of cerebral white matter

Jonathan Doucette; Luxi Wei; Enedino Hernández-Torres; Christian Kames; Nils Daniel Forkert; Rasmus Aamand; Torben E. Lund; Brian Benjamin Hansen; Alexander Rauscher

&NA; Blood vessel related magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast provides a window into the brains metabolism and function. Here, we show that the spin echo dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) MRI signal of the brains white matter (WM) strongly depends on the angle between WM tracts and the main magnetic field. The apparent cerebral blood flow and volume are 20% larger in fibres perpendicular to the main magnetic field compared to parallel fibres. We present a rapid numerical framework for the solution of the Bloch‐Torrey equation that allows us to explore the isotropic and anisotropic components of the vascular tree. By fitting the simulated spin echo DSC signal to the measured data, we show that half of the WM vascular volume is comprised of vessels running in parallel with WM fibre tracts. The WM blood volume corresponding to the best fit to the experimental data was 2.82%, which is close to the PET gold standard of 2.6%. HighlightsThe spin echo dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI signal depends on the orientation of the brains white matter with respect to the main magnetic field.We show that about half of the white matter blood resides in vessels that run in parallel with white matter tracts.We present a solution of the Bloch‐Torrey equation that is two orders of magnitude faster to compute than direct matrix exponential based methods.


Nitric Oxide | 2014

Oral 1921-1 – Impact of nitrite and nitrate on the cerebral microvasculature

Rasmus Aamand; Torben E. Lund; Nina Iversen

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Nina Iversen

Oslo University Hospital

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