Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Multiple injections of METH (4 x 10 mg/kg, i.p.) at room temperature (23 degrees C) produced a significant depletion of dopamine (DA) and its metabolites DOPAC and HVA in striatum at 24 and 72 hr, and 1 and 2 wk. 2. Three days post 4 x 10 mg/kg METH at 23 degrees C, an 80% decrease in striatal dopamine (DA) occurred, while the same dose at 4 degrees C produced only a 20% DA decrease, and 4 x 20 mg/kg METH at 4 degrees C produced a 54% DA decrease. A similar pattern in the decreases of the DA metabolites DOPAC and HVA was observed after METH administration. 3. At 23 degrees C (+)MK-801 completely blocked while phenobarbital (40% decrease) and diazepam (65% decrease) partially blocked decreases in striatal DA produced by 4 x 10 mg/kg METH. Decreases in DOPAC and HVA were similar to the decreases in DA after METH and antagonists. 4. Multiple injections of METH (4 x 10 mg/kg, i.p.) at room temperature also produced a significant depletion of serotonin (5-HT) in striatum at 24 and 72 hr, and 1 and 2 wk. The depletion of 5-HT metabolite 5-HIAA was found only at 72 hr post-dosing. 5. This depletion of 5-HT and its metabolite 5-HIAA at room temperature was blocked either by changing the environmental temperature to 4 degrees C, or by pretreatment with MK-801, diazepam and phenobarbital after METH treatment. 6. Therefore, these data suggest that drugs that block METH toxicity, such as haloperidol (D2 receptors), pentobarbital and phenobarbital (chloride channels) and MK-801 (NMDA/glutamate receptors), do not necessarily have the same mechanism of action but may either induce hypothermia or block induction of hyperthermia. 7. In summary, these studies show that in the mouse, environmental temperature greatly influences METH neurotoxicity, and that the protective effects of compounds such as diazepam, phenobarbital and MK-801 may be mediated by blockade of METH-induced hyperthermia.
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PMID:Methamphetamine-induced dopaminergic toxicity in mice. Role of environmental temperature and pharmacological agents. 895 33

The purpose of this study was to develop a primate model for assessing EEG, behavior and histology, and to test the effect of NMDA receptor blockade in transient focal ischemia. Squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) under halothane anesthesia were subjected to 110 min of transient focal ischemia (n = 15) by temporary clip occlusion of the MCA. An eight-lead EEG was recorded. Neurobehavioral testing was done in a subgroup of animals (n = 6). Brain temperature (37.5 degrees C) was monitored and controlled to avoid hypothermia or intergroup temperature differences, and blood pressure was regulated to 60 mmHg. The entire brain was subserially sectioned, and 52 standardized coronal sections encompassing the infarct were examined histologically 2 wk after the ischemia. Animals were randomized to receive either (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine (MK-801) 1 mg/kg of maleate salt or carrier solution, 20 min and again at 12 h after the onset of ischemia. Cingulate and retrosplenial cortex were examined for NMDA-antagonist-induced neuronal necrosis. No reduction, or trend toward reduction of neurobehavioral deficit was seen with MK-801. MCA occulsion reduced EEG power over the ischemic hemisphere. MK-801 appeared to cause brain activation, and globally increased power at several frequencies. MK-801 did not reduce infarction in either neocortex (p > 0.05) or striatum (p > 0.05). No selective neuronal necrosis was seen in the cingulate or retrosplenial cortex. We conclude that MK-801 given 20 min after the onset of transient ischemia offers no significant neuroprotective effect against either neurobehavioral deficit or ischemic infarction in this model of transient focal ischemia. Further experiments in unanesthetized animals are necessary to determine if MK-801-induced necrosis exists in the gyrencephalic brain, but the enhancement of primate brain electrical activity by MK-801 suggests that brain activation occurs in primates as it does in rodents.
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PMID:Postischemic therapy with MK-801 (dizocilpine) in a primate model of transient focal brain ischemia. 897 96

Hypothermia has been reported to be beneficial in CNS physical injury and ischemia. We previously reported that posttraumatic cooling to 17 degrees C for 2 h increased survival of mouse spinal cord (SC) neurons subjected to physical injury (dendrite transection) but that cooling below 17 degrees C caused a lethal NMDA receptor-linked stress to both lesioned and uninjured neurons. The present study tested whether cooling below 17 degrees C increases extracellular levels of excitatory amino acids (EAA). SC cultures were placed at 10 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Glutamate (Glu) and aspartate (Asp) levels were higher in the medium of the cooled cultures after 0.5 h (23 +/- 4 nM/microgram vs. 4 +/- 1 nM/microgram and 4 +/- 1 nM/microgram vs. 1 +/- 0 nM/microgram, respectively). The concentration of each EAA then declined and reached a plateau at 2-4 h that was still significantly higher than control levels (p < 0.0001, two-factor ANOVA, three cultures per group). Other amino acids (glycine, asparagine, glutamine, serine) showed an opposite pattern, with higher levels in the 37 degrees C group. Both NMDA and non-NMDA antagonists prevented the lethal cold injury. Survival of SC neurons cooled at 10 degrees C for 2 h and rewarmed for 22 h was 58% +/- 25% in the control group, 94% +/- 5% in the CNQX-treated group, 97% +/- 5% in the DAPV-treated group, and 99% +/- 2% in the group treated with both antagonists [p < 0.0006, one factor ANOVA, five cultures (> 120 neurons) per group]. These results show that death of neurons cooled to 10 degrees C is caused by elevated extracellular Glu and Asp and requires activation of both the NMDA and non-NMDA receptor subtypes.
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PMID:The role of excitatory amino acids in hypothermic injury to mammalian spinal cord neurons. 900 66

The effects of the GABAA receptor antagonists, pentylenetetrazol, bicuculline, and picrotoxin, the glycine antagonist, strychnine, and the NMDA receptor antagonist, memantine, on ethanol-induced behavioral sleep and body temperature were investigated. Pentylenetetrazol, bicuculline, and picrotoxin given prior and following ethanol reduced the behavioral sleep and potentiated the hypothermia caused by ethanol. However, convulsions appeared when bicuculline, but not pentylenetetrazol and picrotoxin, were given following ethanol. After the reversal of unconsciousness in rats without convulsions the animals remained awake throughout the experiments without motor incoordination, hyperexcitability, and sedation, but they were in hypothermia within 12 h. The glycine antagonist, strychnine, given prior or after ethanol had virtually no effect on ethanol-induced behavioral sleep and hypothermia. Ethanol given prior or following strychnine failed to antagonize strychnine-induced convulsions. The NMDA receptor antagonist, memantine, given following ethanol potentiated the behavioral sleep and had virtually no effect on hypothermia induced by ethanol. It is suggested that the ethanol-induced behavioral sleep may be attributed to its ability to enhance the GABAergic mechanisms and to inhibit NMDA-mediated excitatory responses. However, the ethanol-induced hypothermia may be ascribed solely to the facilitation of GABAergic transmission. Further, it is postulated that a bidirectional inhibitory system subserves the regulation of behavioral sleep and convulsions. However, one-way inhibitory system underlies the ethanol-induced hypothermia.
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PMID:Opposite effects of GABAA and NMDA receptor antagonists on ethanol-induced behavioral sleep in rats. 908 18

We have recently reported that pretreatment with NMDA receptor antagonists [(+)MK-801 and ketamine] inhibited the development of rapid tolerance to ethanol hypothermia and motor-impairment on day 2 in animals receiving ethanol on day 1, compared to the control group pretreated with saline. In these studies rats were tested at 30, 60, 90 and 120 min after ethanol on both day 1 and 2. In the present report we compared the development of rapid tolerance under 2 different conditions: (1) in groups of rats that were tested on the tilt-plane at all test times (Testing or Intoxicated Practice group), (2) in groups of rats that were not tested on the tilt-plane but were handled at all test times on day 1 (dummy testing). Rats were pretreated with ethanol or saline on day 1 and tested with ethanol on day 2 in all the above studies. Both testing (intoxicated practice) and dummy testing of animals on day 1 after pretreatment with ethanol produced rapid tolerance to ethanol on day 2. However, (+)MK-801 or ketamine pretreatment, which blocked rapid tolerance in the intoxicated practice testing paradigm, failed to block rapid tolerance in the dummy testing paradigm. Similar results were obtained for rapid tolerance and for the effect of ketamine in the hypothermia experiment. These findings suggest that NMDA antagonists block rapid tolerance in the intoxicated testing paradigm but not in the dummy testing paradigm. However, whether the two types of rapid tolerance tested in the present experiments are indeed different or interrelated remains to be further investigated.
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PMID:Effect of NMDA antagonists on rapid tolerance to ethanol under two different testing paradigms. 925 96

This study was performed to examine the roles of body temperature, NMDA receptors and nitric oxide (NO) synthase in post-ischemic retinal injury in rats. Cell loss in the ganglion cell layer and thinning of the inner plexiform layer were observed 7 days after ischemia. Cell loss in the ganglion cell layer but not thinning of the inner plexiform layer was reduced by hypothermia during ischemia. Intravenous injection of dizocilpine (MK-801) or Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) prior to ischemia ameliorated retinal injury. These results suggest that activation of NO synthase following NMDA receptor stimulation is involved in ischemia-induced retinal injury.
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PMID:Inhibition of NMDA receptors and nitric oxide synthase reduces ischemic injury of the retina. 968 14

Although profound hypothermia has been used for decades to protect the human brain from hypoxic or ischemic insults, little is known about the underlying mechanism. We therefore report the first characterization of the effects of moderate (30 degrees C) and profound hypothermia (12 degrees to 20 degrees C) on excitotoxicity in cultured cortical neurons exposed to excitatory amino acids (EAA; glutamate, N-methyl-D-aspartate [NMDA], AMPA, or kainate) at different temperatures (12 degrees to 37 degrees C). Cooling neurons to 30 degrees C and 20 degrees C was neuroprotective, but cooling to 12 degrees C was toxic. The extent of protection depended on the temperature, the EAA receptor agonist employed, and the duration of the EAA challenge. Neurons challenged briefly (5 minutes) with all EAA were protected, as were neurons challenged for 60 minutes with NMDA, AMPA, or kainate. The protective effects of hypothermia (20 degrees and 30 degrees C) persisted after rewarming to 37 degrees C, but rewarming from 12 degrees C was deleterious. Surprisingly, however, prolonged (60 minutes) exposures to glutamate unmasked a temperature-insensitive component of glutamate neurotoxicity that was not seen with the other, synthetic EAA; this component was still mediated via NMDA receptors, not by ionotropic or metabotropic non-NMDA receptors. The temperature-insensitivity of glutamate toxicity was not explained by effects of hypothermia on EAA-evoked [Ca2+]i increases measured using high- and low-affinity Ca2+ indicators, nor by effects on mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species. This first characterization of excitotoxicity at profoundly hypothermic temperatures reveals a previously unnoticed feature of glutamate neurotoxicity unseen with the other EAA, and also suggests that hypothermia protects the brain at the level of neurons by blocking, rather than slowing, excitotoxicity.
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PMID:Characterization of neuroprotection from excitotoxicity by moderate and profound hypothermia in cultured cortical neurons unmasks a temperature-insensitive component of glutamate neurotoxicity. 970 46

Serotonergic, NMDA, or opioid antagonists in the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) reduce morphine analgesia elicited from the periaqueductal gray (PAG). Continuous (CCWS) and intermittent (ICWS) cold-water swims elicit respective naltrexone-insensitive and naltrexone-sensitive analgesic responses. CCWS analgesia is reduced by systemic NMDA receptor antagonism and by systemic, but not intrathecal serotonergic antagonism. ICWS analgesia is reduced by both systemic and intrathecal serotonergic antagonism, but unaffected by systemic NMDA antagonism. The present study evaluated whether serotonergic (methysergide: 5-10 microg) or competitive [AP7 (2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid): 0.01-0.1 microg] or non-competitive [MK-801 (dizocilipine maleate): 0.3-3 microg] NMDA antagonists in the RVM altered CCWS and ICWS analgesia and hypothermia as well as basal nociceptive latencies. Methysergide in the RVM significantly potentiated CCWS, but not ICWS analgesia. In contrast, AP7 in the RVM significantly potentiated ICWS analgesia. Antagonist-induced changes in either hypothermia or basal nociception failed to account for any alterations in stress-induced analgesia. These data suggest that serotonergic, but not NMDA, receptors in the RVM may mediate collateral inhibition between mesencephalic morphine analgesia and naltrexone-insensitive CCWS analgesia.
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PMID:Alterations in swim stress-induced analgesia and hypothermia following serotonergic or NMDA antagonists in the rostral ventromedial medulla of rats. 974 86

Muscarinic and NMDA receptors contribute to post-traumatic hypersensitivity to secondary ischemia. However, the effect of these receptor antagonists on behavior and CA1 neuronal death after traumatic brain injury (TBI) with acute (1 h after TBI) forebrain ischemia has not been systematically assessed. We examined cognitive and motor dysfunction and the relationship of behavior deficits to neuronal death in this model using muscarinic and NMDA antagonists. Three behavioral groups (n=10/group) of Wistar rats were subjected to mild TBI and 6 min of forebrain ischemia imposed 1 h after TBI with 45 days survival. Motor and spatial memory performance were assessed using the rotarod task and Morris water maze. Seven additional groups (n=6/group) were evaluated only for CA1 death after 7 days survival following sham, individual or combined injury with and without drug treatments. Rats were given 0.3 mg/kg MK-801 (M) and 1.0 mg/kg scopolamine (S) alone or combined (M-S) before or 45 min after TBI. Rotarod performance was tested at days 1-5 and maze performance on days 11-15 and 40-44 after M-S treatment. The 7-day studies showed M-S treatment (p<0.01) reduced CA1 neuronal death better than either S or M alone. Behavioral groups had inadvertent post-ischemic hypothermia that decreased CA1 death and likely influenced behavioral morbidity. M-S given before TBI (p<0.01) decreased memory deficits on day 15, while M-S treatment given after TBI was ineffective. Unexpectedly, M-S treatment before or after TBI produced transient motor deficits (p<0. 01). Memory improvement occurred independent of CA1 death.
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PMID:Combined therapy affects outcomes differentially after mild traumatic brain injury and secondary forebrain ischemia in rats. 988 50

Glutapyrone, a disodium salt of 2-(2,6-dimethyl-3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydropyridine-4-carboxamido)- glutaric acid, is a representative of a novel 'class' of amino acid-containing 1,4-dihydropyridine (DHP) compounds developed at the Latvian Institute of Organic Synthesis, Riga, Latvia. Conceptually, the glutapyrone molecule can be regarded as a dipeptide-mimicking structure formed by the "free" amino acid (glutamate) moiety and "crypto" (built into the DHP cycle) amino acid ("GABA") elements. Both of these amino acids are joined by the peptide bond. This compound unlike classical DHPs lacks calcium antagonistic or agonistic properties. Our previous studies revealed a profound and long-term anticonvulsant, stress-protective and neurodeficit-preventive activities of glutapyrone. In view of structural properties the role of glutamatergic mechanisms in the mediation of central effects of glutapyrone was considered. In the present study glutapyrone at the concentration range of 1 microM(-1) mM failed to effect both NMDA ([3H]TCP) and non-NMDA ([3H]KA and [3H]AMPA) receptor ligand binding in the rat cortical membranes in vitro. The compound markedly enhanced motor hyperactivity induced by the NMDA antagonist PCP and the dopamine releasing compound D-amphetamine in the rats. Glutapyrone displayed activity in a variety of animal models relevant for affective/depressive disorders in humans i.e. reserpine-induced ptosis and hypothermia, forced swimming test and open field test. These data indicate that the unusually "broad" pharmacological spectrum of glutapyrone might involve concomitant actions on multiple neurotransmitter systems, particularly, GABA-ergic and the catecholamines. It is discussed whether these functional properties are secondary to action on intracellular events, predominantly, G protein-related since glutapyrone appears to lack direct interactions with a number of receptors including ionotropic glutamate and GABA(A)/Bzd receptors.
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PMID:"Atypical" neuromodulatory profile of glutapyrone, a representative of a novel 'class' of amino acid-containing dipeptide-mimicking 1,4-dihydropyridine (DHP) compounds: in vitro and in vivo studies. 992 26


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