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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effectiveness of the alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin for preventing monoaminergic axonal damage in the spinal cords of rats that were inoculated for experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) was assessed using immunohistochemistry.
Prazosin
injections (2 mg, i.p.) given twice daily from day 7 to day 15 postinoculation significantly reduced paralysis, spinal cord inflammation and monoaminergic axonal damage compared to saline injections. A close positive correlation between severity of inflammation and severity of axonal damage was found for both prazosin- and saline-treated rats that were inoculated for EAE. These findings confirmed previous observations of suppression of the development of clinical signs of EAE by prazosin treatment and supported the hypothesis that some factor associated with spinal cord inflammation may be responsible for the bulbospinal monoaminergic axonal damage that occurs during EAE.
...
PMID:Prazosin suppresses development of axonal damage in rats inoculated for experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. 135 63
Prazosin
, an antagonist of alpha 1-adrenergic receptors, has been found to suppress the clinical and histological expression of experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) in the Lewis rat. Suppression was more significant in females than in males and was a dose-dependent phenomenon. Analysis of the effect of other adrenergic receptor antagonists supports the conclusion that the suppressive effect of prazosin is a consequence of blockade of the alpha 1-receptor since treatment with either the alpha 2-antagonist yohimbine or the beta-antagonist propranolol exacerbated the disease, whereas treatment with the long-acting mixed alpha 1/alpha 2-antagonist phenoxybenzamine had some suppressive activity. Treatment with prazosin was also able to suppress clinical and histological signs of EAE in animals sensitized by adoptive transfer with activated spleen or lymph node cells. Whether prazosin acts through altering vascular permeability or the immune response, or both, remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Prazosin, an alpha 1-adrenergic receptor antagonist, suppresses experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat. 299 53
As part of a study on the role of vasoactive amines in experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), we have found that treatment beginning 7 days post-inoculation (dpi) with the specific alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin can significantly suppress clinical signs of disease in the Lewis rat. In this paper we have addressed the effect of treatment with prazosin commencing at varying times in the disease process. The results show that treatment during the early inductive stage (1 to 6 dpi) has no effect on the clinical course of the disease, whereas treatment commencing at the time of onset of early clinical signs (10 to 16 dpi) still significantly suppresses EAE. Leakage of serum proteins into the central nervous system (CNS) and histologic expression of EAE are also suppressed.
Prazosin
had no effect on lymphocyte responses to mitogen or antigen as determined by lymphocyte transformation tests when lymphocytes were exposed to prazosin in vitro, and the responses of lymphocytes from prazosin-treated animals were similar to those from saline-treated animals. These results support the hypothesis that prazosin suppresses EAE through a direct vascular effect although they do not preclude an immunologic component to its mechanism of action.
...
PMID:Prazosin treatment during the effector stage of disease suppresses experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat. 349 Nov 36
Prazosin
, an antagonist of the alpha 1-adrenoceptor, has been found to suppress the clinical and histologic expression of experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) in the Lewis rat. This effect appears to be specific for the alpha 1-receptor. To determine the effect of this drug on vascular permeability to serum proteins and inflammatory cells, leakage of serum proteins into the central nervous system (CNS) was measured with [125I]albumin, and quantitation of cellular inflammation was determined by an estimation of total DNA. The results show that in both actively induced and passively transferred models of the disease, treatment with prazosin significantly suppresses leakage of serum proteins into the CNS but does not significantly suppress the increase of DNA. The results of the [125I]albumin studies additionally support the conclusion that the extent of vascular permeability to serum proteins in the spinal cord is a significant correlate of clinical disease. The results of the DNA estimation were at variance with the histologic evidence of cellular infiltration. We conclude that treatment with prazosin has a significant effect on the development of vascular edema in EAE. These results additionally validate a role for the adrenergic receptor in the development of EAE, and support the hypothesis that the primary site of action of prazosin is on the vascular alpha 1-adrenoceptor.
...
PMID:Prazosin treatment suppresses increased vascular permeability in both acute and passively transferred experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat. 378 88