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Query: UMLS:C0917798 (cerebral ischemia)
17,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study we have examined (1) the integrated function of the mitochondrial respiratory chain by polarographic measurements and (2) the activities of the respiratory chain complexes I, II-III, and IV as well as the ATP synthase (complex V) in free mitochondria and synaptosomes isolated from gerbil brain, after a 30-min period of graded cerebral ischaemia. These data have been correlated with cerebral blood flow (CBF) values as measured by the hydrogen clearance technique. Integrated functioning of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, using both NAD-linked and FAD-linked substrates, was initially affected at CBF values of approximately 35 ml 100 g-1 min-1, and declined further as the CBF was reduced. The individual mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes, however, showed differences in sensitivity to graded cerebral ischaemia. Complex I activities decreased sharply at blood flows below approximately 30 ml 100 g-1 min-1 (mitochondria and synaptosomes) and complex II-III activities decreased at blood flows below 20 ml 100 g-1 min-1 (mitochondria) and 35-30 ml 100 g-1 min-1 (synaptosomes). Activities declined further as CBF was reduced below these levels. Complex V activity was significantly affected only when the blood flow was reduced below 15-10 ml 100 g-1 min-1 (mitochondria and synaptosomes). In contrast, complex IV activity was unaffected by graded cerebral ischaemia, even at very low CBF levels.
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PMID:Changes of respiratory chain activity in mitochondrial and synaptosomal fractions isolated from the gerbil brain after graded ischaemia. 772 7

We focus our attention in this presentation to the extracellular ionic changes during and after local ischemia and in repetitive versus single global ischemia. In the cat stroke model of MCA occlusion a considerable variability in the severity of ischemia was observed. This was demonstrated in electrical activity (ECoG), NAD/NADH fluoro-reflectometry and extracellular ionic changes. A striking experience was, that the K+ recovery is rather fast even after two hours of ischemia, and this is partly due to maintained activity of the sodium-potassium pump. After the MCA release a secondary acidosis occurs, which is the result of excess lactic acid production. This lactacidosis is certainly contributes to the late morphological damage. The repeated acidotic insult (in gerbil model of global cerebral ischemia) could be the cause of the more severe morphological and blood-brain-barrier damage in the repetitive ischemia too. The acidosis in many cases is even more pronounced after relieving the carotid arteries. This secondary acidosis causes endothelial damage and vasogenic oedema.
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PMID:Ion and metabolic disturbances after global and focal cerebral ischemia. 857 39

A method for the detection and tracking of propagated fluorescence transients as indicators of depolarizations in focal cerebral ischemia is described, together with initial results indicating the potential of the method. The cortex of the right cerebral hemisphere was exposed for nonrecovery experiments in five cats anesthetized with chloralose and subjected to permanent middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. Fluorescence with 370-nm excitation (attributed to the degree of reduction of the NAD/H couple) was imaged with an intensified charge-coupled device camera and digitized. Sequences of images representing changes in gray level from a baseline image were examined, together with the time courses of mean gray levels in specified regions of interest. Spontaneous increases in fluorescence occurred, starting most commonly at the edge of areas of core ischemia; they propagated usually throughout the periinfarct zone and resolved to varying degrees and at varying rates, depending on proximity of the locus to the MCA input. When a fluorescence transient reached the anterior cerebral artery territory, its initial polarity reversed from an increase to a decrease in fluorescence. An initial increase in fluorescence in response to the arrival of a transient may characterize cortex that will become infarcted, if pathophysiological changes in the periinfarct zone are allowed to evolve naturally.
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PMID:The use of in vivo fluorescence image sequences to indicate the occurrence and propagation of transient focal depolarizations in cerebral ischemia. 862 41

Different times of incomplete cerebral ischemia (2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 30 min) were induced by bilateral common carotid artery occlusion in anesthetized rats to evaluate the time course of changes in lipid peroxidation and energy metabolism. Analysis of malondialdehyde (used to assess the levels of lipid peroxidation), ascorbic acid, oxypurines, nucleosides, nicotinic coenzymes and high-energy phosphates, was carried out by high-performance liquid chromatography on neutralized perchloric acid extract of brain tissue. Under the present experimental conditions, malondialdehyde, nicotinic coenzymes and ATP catabolites (oxypurines and nucleosides) were affected by increasing times of ischemia, with respect to control sham-operated rats. In particular, the concentration of malondialdehyde, undetectable in control brains, increased from 1.26 nmol/g wet weight after 2 min of carotid clamping to 13.42 nmol/g wet weight at the end of 30 min of incomplete cerebral ischemia. The presence of oxidative stress was further supported by ascorbic acid depletion, which was particularly significant after 10 and 30 min of incomplete ischemia. Carotid clamping provoked an imbalance between energy production and consumption that was evidenced by a reduction in ATP and GTP concentrations and an increase in ATP degradation products such as AMP, oxypurines and nucleosides. A decrement in the sum of adenine nucleotides and the energy charge potential indicated a progressive malfunctioning of energy-producing metabolic cycles. A possible contribution to such a severe change in energy state might be related to depletion of NAD and NADP, particularly noticeable after the longest incomplete brain ischemia times, that should have provoked a consequent lessening of oxido-reductive reactions. Bilateral carotid clamping causes a significant reduction in brain oxygen and substrate supply that results in inhibition of energy metabolism and triggering of oxygen-radical-induced lipid peroxidation.
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PMID:Effects of increasing times of incomplete cerebral ischemia upon the energy state and lipid peroxidation in the rat. 943 8

In the present study, the effect of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition on rat cortical energy state was investigated at 24 h after global cerebral ischemia induced by permanent bilateral common carotid artery ligation plus transient hypotension. The specific PARP inhibitor 3-aminobenzamide was injected 10 min before induction of ischemia at a dosage of 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg intracerebroventricularly. Twenty-four hours after ischemia cortical PARP enzyme activity increased from 0.425+/-0.144 to 0.794+/-0.193 units/mg protein. Cerebral ischemia was associated by a decrease in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and phosphocreatine concentrations to 72.5 and 76.8% of controls, respectively. In addition, an 1.9- and 2. 2-fold increase in adenosine monophosphate and adenosine was observed. Specific PARP inhibition with 10 mg/kg 3-aminobenzamide protected the rat energy state by preserving cortical phosphocreatine and NAD(+). Cortical ATP was not changed significantly after PARP inhibition. In conclusion, activation of the nuclear enzyme PARP plays an important role in cerebral energy metabolism during rat global ischemia. Therefore, specific PARP inhibition may offer new strategies in the therapy of vascular diseases such as stroke.
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PMID:The neuroprotective effect of cerebral poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase inhibition in a rat model of global ischemia. 1077 Nov 74

It has been proposed that NAD depletion resulting from excessive activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase is responsible for secondary energy failure after transient cerebral ischemia. However, this hypothesis has never been verified by measurement of ATP and NAD levels in the same tissue sample. In this study, we therefore investigated the effect of transient focal cerebral ischemia on the temporal profiles of changes in the levels of energy metabolites and NAD. Ischemia was induced in mice by occluding the left middle cerebral artery using the intraluminal filament technique. Animals were subjected to 1-h ischemia, followed by 0, 1, 3, 6, or 24 h of reperfusion. During ischemia, ATP levels, total adenylate pool, and adenylate energy charge dropped to approximately 20, 50, and 40% of control, respectively, whereas NAD levels remained close to control. Energy state recovered transiently, peaking at 3 h of recovery (ATP levels and total adenylate pool recovered to 78 and 81% of control). In animals subjected to reperfusion of varying duration, the extent of ATP depletion was clearly more pronounced than that of NAD. The results imply that depletion of NAD pools did not play a major role in secondary disturbances of energy-producing metabolism after transient focal cerebral ischemia. Changes in ATP levels were closely related to changes in total adenylate pool (p<0.001). The high energy charge after 6 h of reperfusion (0.90 versus a control value of 0.93) and the close relationship between the decline of ATP and total adenylate pool suggest that degradation or a washout of adenylates (owing to leaky membranes) rather than a mismatch between energy production and consumption is the main causative factor contributing to the secondary energy failure observed after prolonged recovery.
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PMID:Effect of transient focal ischemia of mouse brain on energy state and NAD levels: no evidence that NAD depletion plays a major role in secondary disturbances of energy metabolism. 1098 49

GPI 6150 (1,11b-dihydro-[2H]benzopyrano[4,3,2-de]isoquinolin-3-one) is a novel inhibitor of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). It has demonstrated efficacy in rodent models of focal cerebral ischemia, traumatic brain injury, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine damage to dopaminergic neurons, regional myocardial ischemia, streptozotocin-induced diabetes, septic shock, and arthritis. Here we report the structure of GPI 6150, its enzymatic characteristics, and biochemical property in cytoprotection. As a competitive PARP inhibitor (K(i) = 60 nM), GPI 6150 protected the P388D1 cells against hydrogen peroxide cytotoxicity, by preventing PARP activation and the depletion of NAD(+), the substrate for PARP. To address the concerns of potential side effects of PARP inhibition, we tested GPI 6150 and found it had no effect on the repair and expression of a plasmid DNA damaged by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. Neither did it affect dehydrogenases with NAD co-enzyme. GPI 6150 was much less potent to inhibit mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase. There was no selectivity for GPI 6150 between PARP isozymes. These attributes render GPI 6150 a useful tool to probe the functions of PARP.
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PMID:GPI 6150 prevents H(2)O(2) cytotoxicity by inhibiting poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. 1109 54

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP, EC 2.4.2.30) is known as a nuclear enzyme that is activated by DNA strand breaks to participate in DNA repair. It is also called poly(ADP-ribose) synthase (PARS) or poly(ADP-ribose) transferase (PADRT). In physiological conditions, PARP plays an important role in maintaining genomic stability. However, for several pathological situations, which include massive DNA injury (brain ischemia for example), excessive activation of PARP can deplete stores of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), the PARP substrate, which, with the subsequent ATP depletion, leads to cell death. PARP activation appears to play a major role in neuronal death induced by cerebral ischemia, traumatic brain injury, Parkinson disease and other pathologies. PARP inhibitors (3-aminobenzamide and other compounds) and PARP gene deletion induced dramatic neuroprotection in experimental animals (rats, mice). Accordingly, these data suggest that PARP inhibitors could provide a novel therapeutic approach in a wide range of neurodegenerative disorders including cerebral ischemia and traumatic brain injury.
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PMID:[Neuronal death: potential role of the nuclear enzyme, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase]. 1150 Dec 63

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide fluorescence, cortical reflectance, cortical blood flow, and electroencephalograms were recorded from squirrel monkey brains before, during, and after focal transient cerebral ischemia produced by the temporary clipping of the middle cerebral artery. After release of the occluding clip, the monkeys were followed through an N2-breathing cycle and then to death from anoxia. The effects of controlled variations in arterial carbon dioxide tensions (PaCO2) and mean arterial blood pressures (MABP) were investigated in normal and in ischemic brain. In normal brain, with preserved autoregulation, NADH fluorescence was constant through a wide range in Paco2, MABP, and cortical blood flow. In ischemic brain, NADH levels increased, correlated closely with decreased cortical blood flow and EEG abnormalities, and became dependent on MABP. Artifacts in fluorescent measurements were reduced by: monochromators for excitation, emission, and reflected light; low intensity vertical excitation energy and high sensitivity recording instrumentation; and a small avascular (123 microns) field.
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PMID:Effect of hypocapnia, hypercapnia, and blood pressure on NADH fluorescence, electrical activity, and blood flow in normal and partially ischemic monkey cortex. 1217 May 99

Oxidative stress plays a pivotal role in ischemic-reperfusion cell injury. Oxygen-derived free radicals trigger DNA strand damage, which is responsible for the activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Recent studies have shown that peroxynitrite is the primary mediator of DNA damage and, hence, PARP activation after ischemia. PARP activation depletes NAD and ATP pools, ultimately resulting in necrotic cell death by loss of energy stores. Our study shows that PARP is upregulated as early as 15 min after 1 h of transient focal cerebral ischemia and remains for 8 h. We also examined the role of superoxide in PARP induction using copper/zinc-superoxide dismutase transgenic mice. Immunohistochemical and Western blotting data showed that there was no increased induction in PARP expression in these mice, suggesting that one of the mechanisms by which ischemic injury is attenuated in these mice might be by the inhibition of PARP induction. Furthermore, double staining of ischemic tissue with a PARP antibody and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated uridine 5'-triphosphate-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) indicated that most cells that are positive for TUNEL do not stain for the PARP antibody, confirming recent reports that PARP activation is involved in necrotic cell death rather than apoptosis during ischemic-reperfusion injury.
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PMID:Role of superoxide in poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase upregulation after transient cerebral ischemia. 1275 3


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