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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pressure overload left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy was produced by banding the ascending aorta of puppies and allowing them to grow to adulthood. LV free wall weight per body weight increased by 87% from a normal value of 3.23 +/- 0.19 g/kg. Hemodynamic studies of conscious dogs with LV hypertrophy and of normal, conscious dogs without LV hypertrophy showed similar base-line values for mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and LV end-diastolic pressure and diameter. LV systolic pressure was significantly greater, P less than 0.01, and LV stroke shortening was significantly lss, P less than 0.01, in the LV hypertrophy group. In both normal and LV hypertrophy groups, increasing bolus doses of norepinephrine or isoproterenol produced equivalent changes in LV dP/dt. beta-adrenergic receptor binding studies with [3H]-dihydroalprenolol ( [3H]DHA) indicated that the density of binding sites was significantly elevated, P less than 0.01, in the hypertrophied LV plasma membranes (111 +/- 8.8, n = 8), as compared with normal LV (61 +/- 5.6 fmol/mg protein, n = 11). The receptor affinity decreased, i.e., disassociation constant (KD) increased, selectively in the LV of the hypertrophy group; the KD in the normal LV was 6.8 +/- 0.7 nM compared with 10.7 +/- 1.8 nM in the hypertrophied LV. These effects were observed only in the LV of the LV hypertrophy group and not in the right ventricles from the same dogs. The plasma membrane marker, 5' -nucleotidase activity, was slightly lower per milligram protein in the LV hypertrophy group, indicating that the differences in beta-adrenergic receptor binding and affinity were not due to an increase in plasma membrane protein in the LV hypertrophy group. The EC50 for isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was similar in both the right and left ventricles and in the two groups. However, maximal-stimulated adenylate cyclase was lower in the hypertrophied left ventricle. Plasma catecholamines were similar in the normal and hypertrophied groups, but myocardial norepinephrine was depressed in the dogs with LV hypertrophy (163 +/- 48 pg/mg) compared with normal dogs (835 +/- 166 pg/mg). Thus, severe, but compensated LV hypertrophy, induced by aortic banding in puppies, is characterized by essentially normal hemodynamics in adult dogs studied at rest and in response to catecholamines in the conscious state. At the cellular level, reduced affinity and increased beta-adrenergic receptor number characterized the LV hypertrophy group, while the EC50 for isoproterenol-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was normal. By these mechanisms, adequate responsiveness to catecholamines is retained in conscious dogs with severe LV hypertrophy.
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PMID:Effects of pressure overload, left ventricular hypertrophy on beta-adrenergic receptors, and responsiveness to catecholamines. 632 5

Glycocalicin (GC) is the soluble portion of platelet membrane protein GP1b, and may be cleaved from the platelet surface during platelet activation. Previous study has indicated that plasma glycocalicin/platelet (GC/plt) levels are elevated in patients presenting with acute stroke. The present study was undertaken to determine the GC/plt levels in patients being treated for transient ischaemic episodes, to assess whether the elevated GC/plt level in acute stroke is due to a detectable, constitutive premorbid state of platelet activation. In sixteen consecutive patients attending a vascular surgery clinic, GC levels were measured on a citrated plasma sample, and corrected for circulating platelet count. Since 15 of 16 patients were taking aspirin when seen at clinic, a control study was undertaken to assess the effect of aspirin on sequential plasma GC/plt levels measured over 10 days--5 pre and post daily aspirin for 5 days, 4 acting as non-aspirinated controls. Plasma GC/plt levels in normal plasma were 21.6 +/- 8.0 fg; mean +/- SD. In the 16 patients the GC/plt levels were 13.1 fg/plt; SD 5.4, range 2.9-24.3. All platelet counts were in the normal range in all patients involved. While a masking effect due to aspirin cannot be completely ruled out, these studies indicate that plasma GC/plt level is not useful as a predictor of acute stroke in the premorbid population.
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PMID:Plasma glycocalicin levels are not elevated in patients with a history of transient ischaemic event and are normal in aspirinated normal volunteers. 892 91

Most large observational studies available today establish that moderate hyperhomocysteinemia, either genetically or nutritionally determined, is an independent risk factor for myocardial infarction, stroke, and thromboembolic disease. This is also true for chronic renal failure patients, who exhibit a high prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia (85-100%), which reaches high plasma concentrations (20-40 microM, while control values range between 8 and 12 microM). After a renal transplant, homocysteine levels decrease, but tend to be higher than normal. The cause of hyperhomocysteinemia in renal failure is still obscure, since recent data have questioned the previous notion that a net homocysteine renal extraction and/or excretion take place in man. No matter the cause of its increase, the sulfur amino acid homocysteine is thought to induce an increment in cardiovascular risk through three basic biochemical mechanisms: (1) homocysteine oxidation, with H2O2 generation; (2) hypomethylation through S-adenosylhomocysteine accumulation, and (3) protein acylation by homocysteine thiolactone. The final result is membrane protein damage, endothelial damage, and endothelial cell growth inhibition, among other effects. Hyperhomocysteinemia, in general, is susceptible of therapeutic intervention with the vitamins involved in its metabolism. Depending on the cause, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, betaine, and/or folic acid can be effectively utilized. Chronic renal failure patients benefit from folic acid in high dosage: 1-2 mg are usually not effective ('relative folate resistance'), while 5-15 mg reduce homocysteine levels to a 'normative' range (<15 microM) in a substantial group of patients. Good results are also obtained in transplant patients, best with a combination of folic and vitamin B6. The results of the interventional trials focusing on the possible reduction in cardiovascular risk after homocysteine-lowering therapy, both in the general population and in end-stage renal disease, are expected soon, as well as the genetic and biochemical studies in suitable models, with the aim to clarify the cause-effect link suggested by the numerous observational and basic science studies.
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PMID:Homocysteine, a new crucial element in the pathogenesis of uremic cardiovascular complications. 1020 68

Insulin resistance is of major pathogenic importance in several common human disorders, but the underlying mechanisms are unknown. The stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive (SHRSP) rat is a model of human insulin resistance and is characterized by reduced insulin-mediated glucose disposal and defective fatty acid metabolism in isolated adipocytes (Collison et al. [Diabetes 49:2222-2226, 2000]). In this study, we have examined skeletal muscle and cultured skeletal muscle myoblasts for defects in insulin action in the male SHRSP rat model compared with the normotensive, insulin-sensitive control strain, Wistar-Kyoto (WKY). We show that skeletal muscle from SHRSP animals exhibits a marked decrease in insulin-stimulated glucose transport compared with WKY animals (fold increase in response to insulin: 1.4 +/- 0.15 in SHRSP, 2.29 +/- 0.22 in WKY; n = 4, P = 0.02), but the stimulation of glucose transport in response to activation of AMP-activated protein kinase was similar between the two strains. Similar reductions in insulin-stimulated glucose transport were also evident in myoblast cultures from SHRSP compared with WKY cultures. These differences were not accounted for by a reduction in cellular GLUT4 content. Moreover, analysis of the levels and subcellular distribution of insulin receptor substrates 1 and 2, the p85alpha subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase, and protein kinase B (PKB)/cAKT in skeletal muscle did not identify any differences between the two strains; the insulin-dependent activation of PKB/cAKT was not different between the two strains. However, the total cellular levels of caveolin and flotillin, proteins implicated in insulin signal transduction/compartmentalization, were markedly elevated in skeletal muscles from SHRSP compared with WKY animals. Increased cellular levels of the soluble N-ethylmaleimide attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins syntaxin 4 and vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)-2 were also observed in the insulin-resistant SHRSP strain. Taken together, these data suggest that the insulin resistance observed in the SHRSP is manifest at the level of skeletal muscle, that muscle cell glucose transport exhibits a blunted response to insulin but unchanged responses to activation of AMP-activated protein kinase, that alterations in key molecules in both GLUT4 trafficking and insulin signal compartmentalization may underlie these defects in insulin action, and that the insulin resistance of these muscles appears to be of genetic origin rather than a paracrine or autocrine effect, since the insulin resistance is also observed in cultured myoblasts over several passages.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle of stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats exhibits reduced insulin-stimulated glucose transport and elevated levels of caveolin and flotillin. 1152 83

Glycoprotein VI is a type I membrane protein identified as a key platelet receptor for collagen. In vitro binding of the GPVI receptor with collagen leads to activation and ultimately to aggregation of platelets. In vivo, GPVI-collagen interactions could cause formation of occlusive thrombi within vessels with damaged endothelial barriers. GPVI antagonists are therefore important therapeutics in patients suffering from collagen-mediated ischemic disorders such as myocardial infarction or stroke. Polyclonal antibodies to GPVI prepared from one patient serum have previously been described. However, only their monovalent Fab fragments, incapable of receptor crosslinking, were found to protect platelets from collagen-mediated aggregation. Here we describe GPVI-neutralizing human antibodies derived from a combinatorial phage display library of single-chain antibodies. By selecting phage on GPVI-expressing U937 cells, we isolated five specific antibodies - A4, A9, A10, C3 and C9. Of the set A10 and C3 specifically blocked GPVI binding to collagen-rich adventitial layers in aorta sections. The higher affinity antibody A10 inhibited binding of snake-venom convulxin to GPVI. It also specifically protected human platelets from collagen-induced aggregation in vitro. A10-bound platelets could still be activated by ADP or thrombin suggesting that this human scFv may represent an original anti-platelet agent for the treatment of collagen-mediated thrombotic diseases.
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PMID:Anti GPVI human antibodies neutralizing collagen-induced platelet aggregation isolated from a combinatorial phage display library. 1245 70

Apoptosis plays a critical role in many neurologic diseases, including stroke. Cytochrome c release and activation of various caspases are known to occur after focal and global ischemia. However, recent reports indicate that caspase-independent pathways may also be involved in ischemic damage. Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) is a novel flavoprotein that helps mediate caspase-independent apoptotic cell death. AIF translocates from mitochondria to nuclei where it induces caspase-independent DNA fragmentation. Bcl-2, a mitochondrial membrane protein, protects against apoptotic and necrotic death induced by different insults, including cerebral ischemia. In the present study, Western blots confirmed that AIF was normally confined to mitochondria but translocated to nuclei or cytosol 8, 24, and 48 hours after onset of ischemia. Overall, AIF protein levels also increased after stroke. Confocal microscopy further demonstrated that nuclear AIF translocation occurred in the peri-infarct region but not in the ischemic core where only some cytosolic AIF release was observed. Our data also suggest that AIF translocated into nuclei after cytochrome c was released into the cytosol. Bcl-2 transfection in the peri-infarct region blocked nuclear AIF translocation and improved cortical neuron survival.
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PMID:Bcl-2 transfection via herpes simplex virus blocks apoptosis-inducing factor translocation after focal ischemia in the rat. 1518 76

The growing number of cellular and molecular pathways believed to be involved in mechanisms of ischemic cell death in the brain has spurred a similar growth in the number of potential neuroprotective modalities, the majority of which are pharmacological in nature. Preventing or minimizing the first few steps in the cascade of events leading to ischemic cell death would have a more profound effect on the postischemic outcome than intervention at later steps in that cascade. This logic is, of course, at the heart of the urgency in providing the stroke or cardiac arrest patient with the earliest possible neuroprotective treatment. For the purpose of assessing potential neuroprotective modalities, the use of a well-established cerebral hypoxic/ischemic model system is a prerequisite. In our studies, we have used two major approaches, in vitro and in vivo. We evaluated both agonists and antagonists of ionotropic glutamate receptor channels (IGRC) and their effects in exacerbating and attenuating, respectively, the posthypoxic/ischemic outcome. Other drugs were tested for their ability to block the L-type voltage-sensitive calcium channels (VSCC), which are responsible for calcium influx and overload upon hypoxia/ischemia. These two membrane protein entities, the IGRC and the VSCC, are believed to be involved in the early stages of the cellular cascade that leads to the demise of neurons posthypoxia/ischemia. Some of the drugs were also tested for possible interaction with each other searching for possible synergy. These and other published studies in the field are reviewed here.
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PMID:Neuroprotection against ischemic/hypoxic brain damage: blockers of ionotropic glutamate receptor and voltage sensitive calcium channels. 1547 50

The detrimental effect of severe hypoxia (SH) on neurons can be mitigated by hypoxic preconditioning (HPC), but the molecular mechanisms involved remain unclear, and an understanding of these may provide novel solutions for hypoxic/ischemic disorders (e.g. stroke). Here, we show that the delta-opioid receptor (DOR), an oxygen-sensitive membrane protein, mediates the HPC protection through specific signaling pathways. Although SH caused a decrease in DOR expression and neuronal injury, HPC induced an increase in DOR mRNA and protein levels and reversed the reduction in levels of the endogenous DOR peptide, leucine enkephalin, normally seen during SH, thus protecting the neurons from SH insult. The HPC-induced protection could be blocked by DOR antagonists. The DOR-mediated HPC protection depended on an increase in ERK and Bcl 2 activity, which counteracted the SH-induced increase in p38 MAPK activities and cytochrome c release. The cross-talk between ERK and p38 MAPKs displays a "yinyang" antagonism under the control of the DOR-G protein-protein kinase C pathway. Our findings demonstrate a novel mechanism of HPC neuroprotection (i.e. the intracellular up-regulation of DOR-regulated survival signals).
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PMID:Oxygen-sensitive {delta}-opioid receptor-regulated survival and death signals: novel insights into neuronal preconditioning and protection. 1568 1

Effective stroke therapies require recanalization of occluded cerebral blood vessels; however, early reperfusion can cause BBB (blood-brain barrier) injury, leading to cerebral oedema and/or devastating brain haemorrhage. These complications of early reperfusion, which result from excess production of ROS (reactive oxygen species), significantly limit the benefits of stroke therapies. Here, we summarize some of the findings that lead to the development of a novel animal model that facilitates identification of specific free radical-associated components of the reperfusion injury process and allows therapeutic interventions to be assessed. In this model, KO (knockout) mice containing 50% activity of the mitochondrial antioxidant manganese-SOD (superoxide dismutase) (SOD2-KO) undergo transient focal ischaemia followed by reperfusion. These animals have delayed (>24 h) BBB breakdown associated with activation of matrix metalloproteinase-9, inflammation and a high brain haemorrhage rate. These adverse consequences are absent from wild-type littermates, SOD2 overexpressors and minocycline-treated SOD2-KO animals. In addition, using microvessel isolations following in vivo ischaemia/reperfusion, we were able to show that the tight junction membrane protein, occludin, is an early and specific target in ROS-mediated microvascular injury. This new model is ideal for studying ischaemia/reperfusion-induced vascular injury and secondary brain damage and offers a unique opportunity to evaluate free radical-based neurovascular protective strategies.
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PMID:A new approach for the investigation of reperfusion-related brain injury. 1707 20

No effective therapy is available for treating intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). One of several key components of brain damage after ICH is the neurotoxicity of blood products. Within hours to days after ICH, extravasated erythrocytes in the hematoma undergo lysis, releasing cytotoxic hemoglobin, heme, and iron, thereby initiating secondary processes, which negatively influence the viability of cells surrounding the hematoma. To offset this process, phagocytic cells, including the brain's microglia and hematogenous macrophages, phagocytose and then process extravasated erythrocytes before lysis and subsequent toxicity occurs. Therefore, we hypothesize that a treatment that stimulates phagocytosis will lead to faster removal of blood from the ICH-affected brain, thus limiting/preventing hemolysis from occurring. CD36 is a well-recognized integral microglia/macrophage cell membrane protein known to mediate phagocytosis of damaged, apoptotic, or senescent cells, including erythrocytes. CD36 and catalase expression are regulated by peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma agonists (eg, rosiglitazone). We demonstrate that peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma agonist-induced upregulation of CD36 in macrophages enhances the ability of microglia to phagocytose red blood cells (in vitro assay), helps to improve hematoma resolution, and reduces ICH-induced deficit in a mouse model of ICH. The beneficial role of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma-induced catalase expression in the context of phagocytosis is also discussed. Proxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma agonists could represent a potential treatment strategy for treatment of ICH.
Stroke 2009 Mar
PMID:Hematoma resolution as a therapeutic target: the role of microglia/macrophages. 1906 96


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