Brain injury
Blood pressure drugs ‘can reduce swelling after TBI’
Already-approved combination of medication could see clinical studies around life-saving potential move quickly
Published
2 weeks agoon

Drugs approved to treat high blood pressure can reduce potentially deadly brain swelling after TBI, new research has revealed.
Cerebral edema, the brain swelling that occurs after traumatic brain injury (TBI), can increase risk of death ten-fold and significantly worsen prospects for recovery in brain function.
In extreme cases, surgeons will remove a portion of the skull to relieve pressure, but this has significant risks and is not viable for the vast majority of TBI cases. Doctors have very few tools at their disposal that are effective in treating cerebral edema, which is one of the main causes of in-hospital deaths and is associated with long-term neuro disability.
However, new research has revealed that a combination of drugs already approved to treat high blood pressure quickly reduces brain swelling and improves outcomes in animal models of brain injury.
“Our research shows that cerebral edema is the consequence of impaired fluid flow through the glymphatic system and its associated lymphatic drainage,” said Dr Maiken Nedergaard, co-director of the University of Rochester Center for Translational Neuromedicine and senior author of the study.
“This impairment is under adrenergic control, and can therefore be rescued pharmacologically by broadly inhibiting adrenergic receptors.
“Because these drugs are already being used clinically and have observed neurological benefits, there is the potential to move quickly to clinical studies to confirm these findings.”
The glymphatic system was first described by Nedergaard’s lab in 2012 as the brain’s unique waste removal process. Since then, a growing understanding of the mechanics of the system–aided by advanced imaging technologies and AI-driven models of fluid dynamics—has allowed researchers to better predict and manipulate the movement of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the central nervous system.
This research has opened new possibilities to treat Alzheimer’s and other neurological disorders and more effectively deliver and distribute drugs in the central and peripheral nervous system, including the inner ear.
The new study points to the potential to repurpose the glymphatic system to act as an emergency pressure release valve. Cerebral edema is a common consequence of moderate and severe cases of TBI.
“In other parts of the body, edema helps with tissue repair, but because of the skull, the brain has limited capacity for expansion,” said Dr Rashad Hussain, an assistant professor in the Center for Translational Neuromedicine and first author of the study.
“As a result, pressure increases, blood supply decreases, and debris and toxic proteins are trapped at the injury site, compounding the damage and impairing recovery.”
One of the main triggers of cerebral edema is noradrenaline, a neurotransmitter that floods the brain immediately after TBI. Noradrenaline is typically associated with the flight-or-fight response, but in TBI this “adrenergic storm” impairs the flow of CSF in and out of the brain.
The researchers describe how noradrenaline interferes with the function of the glymphatic system. Specifically, it restricts the movement of fluid through the section of the system’s plumbing where CSF drains from the brain and flows into the meningeal and cervical lymph nodes in the neck.
This observation led the team to speculate whether reopening these gates to the lymph nodes could flush excess CSF from the brain, thereby relieving pressure.
A cocktail of alpha- and beta-blockers suppresses the adrenergic storm that occurs in the brain post-TBI. This re-opens the vessels that drain out of the brain and into the lymphatic system, removing excess fluid and debris from the site of injury and relieving pressure on the brain.
The team used drugs including prazosin, atipamezole, and propranolol, to collectively suppress the different receptors used by cells to take up noradrenaline.
Previous research in Nedergaard’s lab has shown that this combination of drugs ramps up the glymphatic system, replicating the level of activity experienced when we sleep, which is when the system is most efficient in manipulating CSF flow to remove waste.
In the new study, the same drug combination was administered to mice soon after TBI. Using fluorescent microspheres, the researchers traced CSF originating from the site of the swelling as it exited in bulk from the brain via the lymphatic vessels, carrying with it debris from the injury to the lymph nodes.
The result was an almost immediate elimination of cerebral edema and a sustained return to normal intracranial pressure in the animals. The treatment resulted significant recovery of cognitive, behavioural, and motor function.
“These findings show that the adrenergic storm, the resulting edema and intracranial pressure, and retention of neural debris can all be reversed by broad adrenergic inhibition, with subsequent improvement in recovery in injured mice,” said Nedergaard.
You may like
New light shed on neuropsychiatric Alzheimer’s symptoms
Brain inflammation ‘seen up to 12 years post-injury’
Pioneering therapy supports return to work after TBI
Can the eye hold the key to brain injury detection?
Current trends and the renaissance of Alzheimer’s drug development
Transforming lives and futures
Trending
- Brain injury3 weeks ago
How I got my cockiness back
- Tech4 weeks ago
Clever design, innovation and craftsmanship deliver an outstanding solution for the Edwards family
- Case management2 weeks ago
Making client dreams come true
- Brain injury4 weeks ago
Calvert Reconnections unveils winter activity programme
- News2 days ago
Compassion focused therapy: Lessons from the frontline of brain injury care
- Premium content3 weeks ago
Concussion in sports: new innovations poised to transform the landscape
- Case management4 weeks ago
Becoming an Expert Witness
- Professional Insight3 weeks ago
Dealing with ambiguous loss