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

We tested the hypothesis that extracellular calcium is a mediator of astroglial injury during combined glucose-oxygen deprivation. Both differentiated and undifferentiated astroglial cultures were exposed to combined glucose-oxygen deprivation in the presence and absence of extracellular calcium. Lactate dehydrogenase efflux was used as an index of cellular injury. Both types of cultures exhibited significantly less cellular injury when exposed to combined glucose-oxygen deprivation in the absence of extracellular calcium (e.g. lactate dehydrogenase efflux in undifferentiated cultures after 12 h of exposure: presence of calcium, 65.2 +/- 2.5% vs. absence of calcium, 21.4 +/- 1.3%). To further elucidate the mechanism by which extracellular calcium produces injury, we studied the effect of nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel blocker, on astroglial injury resulting from combined glucose-oxygen deprivation. Nimodipine decreased cellular injury in both types of cultures (e.g. lactate dehydrogenase efflux in undifferentiated cultures after 12 h of exposure: untreated, 65.4 +/- 2.2% vs. 10 nM nimodipine, 44.6 +/- 4.2%). Extracellular calcium appears to be a mediator of astroglial injury during combined glucose-oxygen deprivation. These results suggest that influx of extracellular calcium via L-type voltage-gated calcium channels may contribute to astroglial injury during cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Extracellular calcium is a mediator of astroglial injury during combined glucose-oxygen deprivation. 145 19

Neuronal cell degeneration was studied in vitro in primary rat brain neuronal cultures grown in serum-free, chemically defined, CDM R12 medium, by measuring lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) released in the culture medium. A Ca2+-dependent neuronal cell degeneration was observed after prolonged and transient exposure 30 microM veratridine. The release of LDH occurred gradually and could be completely prevented by 2 mM ethylene glycol bis (beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, 0.1 microM tetrodotoxin, and 1 microM flunarizine. Flunarizine was without effect on neuronal cell loss induced by 1 mM glutamate, 1 mM kainic acid, and 5 mM KCN. The lack of effect on neurotoxicity induced by 1 mM glutamate differentiates flunarizine from N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists such as MK-801. The latter protected at nanomolar concentrations against glutamate-induced neuronal cell death but had a maximal effect only at 0.1 mM on the veratridine-induced released LDH. It is suggested that, besides the excitatory amino acid receptor pathway, prolonged opening of the veratridine-sensitive Na+ channel can be neurotoxic. The latter can be prevented by flunarizine. The role of Na+ channel blockers as therapeutic agents in cerebral ischemia is discussed.
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PMID:Ca2+-mediated neuronal death in rat brain neuronal cultures by veratridine: protection by flunarizine. 255 10

To better understand why neurons accumulate calcium during cerebral ischemia, the influence of specific ion channel inhibitors on the rise in cytosolic free calcium ([Ca2+]c) during hypoxia or ischemia was evaluated in rat cerebrocortical brain slices. [Ca2+]c was measured fluorometrically with the dye fura-2 during hypoxia (95% N2/5% CO2 or 100 microM NaCN), simulated ischemia (100 microM NaCN plus 3.5 mM iodoacetate), or 0.5-1.0 mM glutamate. Hypoxia or ischemia increased [Ca+2]c from 100-250 nM to 1,000-2,500 nM within 3-5 min. Greater than 85% of the calcium accumulation was influx from the extracellular medium. The non-competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) inhibitor MK-801 reduced [Ca2+]c accumulation during hypoxia, but antagonism of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole (AMPA) receptors or voltage-gated sodium or calcium channels or Na+/Ca2+ exchangers had no effect. During ischemia, combined antagonism of NMDA, AMPA and voltage-gated sodium channels slowed the rate of calcium accumulation, but not concentration at 5 min. Membrane damage, as indicated by leakage of lactate dehydrogenase into superfusate, occurred coincidentally with calcium influx and ATP loss during both hypoxia and ischemia. We conclude that cytosolic calcium changes during hypoxia or ischemia in cortical brain slices are due to multiple mechanisms, are incompletely inhibited by combined ion channel blockade, and are associated with disruption of cell membrane integrity.
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PMID:Causes of calcium accumulation in rat cortical brain slices during hypoxia and ischemia: role of ion channels and membrane damage. 753 4

Arachidonic acid and its metabolites are released in brain extracellular fluids as a result of ischemia and may participate in either damaging or protecting neural tissues. This study investigates the neuroprotective effect of prostacyclin (PGI2) on hypoxia (5 h)/reoxygenation (3 h) and on the excitotoxic neurotransmitter, glutamate (10 microM), in rat cortical neuron cultures. At microM concentrations, PGI2 inhibits lactate dehydrogenase release, a cell-injury marker. These results, showing a direct cytoprotective effect of PGI2 on brain cells, reinforce its beneficial properties on vessels and circulating cells in cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Prostacyclin (PGI2) protects rat cortical neurons in culture against hypoxia/reoxygenation and glutamate-induced injury. 790 41

An in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) consisting of porcine brain derived microvascular endothelial cells (BMEC) seeded onto collagen-coated polycarbonate membranes was used to investigate the effects of the barbiturates, methohexital and thiopental, on permeability properties of the endothelial cell monolayer under hypoxia. The permeability of cultured BMEC to ions and sucrose increased significantly during 6 h of hypoxia in a reversible manner. Cells were resistant to hypoxia for up to 24 h, but 48 h resulted in marked damage as assessed by the release of lactate dehydrogenase activity into the culture medium. The hypoxia-induced increase of the permeability was unchanged in the presence of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase. Methohexital and thiopental decreased the hypoxia-induced permeability increase in a concentration-dependent manner and permeability changes were abolished completely at the barbiturate concentration of 50 micrograms/ml. The barbiturates had no effect on the intracellular cAMP content which started to decline after 3 h of hypoxia. Results suggest that barbiturates at high concentrations might be able to prevent permeability changes of the BBB during cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Effects of barbiturates on hypoxic cultures of brain derived microvascular endothelial cells. 886 12

Acidosis is a universal response of tissue to ischemia. In the brain, severe acidosis has been linked to worsening of cerebral infarction. However, milder acidosis can have protective effects. As part of our investigations of the therapeutic window in our neuronal tissue culture model of ischemia, we investigated the effects of acidosis during recovery from brief simulated ischemia. Ischemic conditions were simulated in dissociated cortical cultures by metabolic inhibition with potassium cyanide to block oxidative metabolism and 2-deoxyglucose to block glycolysis. Lowering the extracellular pH (pH0) to 6.2 during metabolic inhibition had no effect on injury, as measured by lactate dehydrogenase release from cultures after 24 h of recovery. Lowering the pH0 during the first hour of recovery, in contrast, had profound protective effects. When the duration of metabolic inhibition was lengthened to 30 min, most of the protective effects of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 were lost. However, the protective effects of acidosis were unchanged. This suggested that the protective effects of extracellular acidosis could be due to more than blockade of NMDA receptors. Intracellular acidosis might be responsible. To test this, recovery of intracellular pH (pH1) was slowed by incubation with blockers of Na+/H+ exchangers at normal pH0. The two compounds tested, dimethylamiloride and harmaline, had protective effects when present during recovery from metabolic inhibition. Measurements of pH1 confirmed that the blockers slowed recovery from intracellular acidosis; more rapid pH1 recovery was correlated with injury. The protective effects of acidosis could be reversed by brief incubation with the protonophore monensin, which rapidly normalized pH1. These results are the first demonstration of the protective effects of blocking Na+/H+ exchange in a model of cerebral ischemia. The protective effects of acidosis appear to arise either from suppressing pH-sensitive mechanisms of injury or from blocking sodium entry due to Na+/H+ exchange.
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PMID:Protective effects of extracellular acidosis and blockade of sodium/hydrogen ion exchange during recovery from metabolic inhibition in neuronal tissue culture. 893 70

Oxygen free radicals, generated by cerebral ischemia, have been widely implicated in the damage of vascular endothelium. Endothelial cells have been proposed as a significant source of oxygen free radicals. In the present study, we developed an anoxia-reoxygenation (AX/RO) model using pure cultures of cerebral endothelial cells (CECs) isolated from piglet cortex to measure CEC oxygen free radical production and determine its role in AX/RO-induced CEC injury. CEC injury, as measured by lactate dehydrogenase efflux into the culture medium, increased progressively with the duration of anoxic exposure, becoming significant after 10 h. Reoxygenation significantly increased CEC anoxic injury in a time-dependent manner. A 55% increase in oxygen free radical production, determined by fluorescence detection of dihydroethidium oxidation, was measured at the end of 4-h reoxygenation in CECs subjected to AX/RO conditions that killed 40% of the cells. Blockade of oxygen free radical production with superoxide dismutase (SOD; 250 and 1000 U/ml) or oxypurinol (50 and 200 microM), a potent xanthine oxidase inhibitor, reduced this injury by 32-36% and 30-39%, respectively. Results from our in vitro model indicate that CECs produce significant amounts of oxygen free radicals following ischemia, primarily from the xanthine oxidase pathway. These radicals ultimately have a cytotoxic effect on the very cells that produced them. Thus, reductions in oxygen free radical-mediated vascular injury may contribute to improvements in neurophysiologic outcome following treatment with oxygen free radical inhibitors and scavengers.
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PMID:Xanthine oxidase-derived superoxide causes reoxygenation injury of ischemic cerebral endothelial cells. 955 65

It has been suggested that large amounts of nitric oxide (NO) produced by inducible NO synthase are involved in the mechanisms of neurotoxicity after cerebral ischaemia. We have recently demonstrated that inducible NO synthase was expressed within hours after rat forebrain slices were exposed to oxygen-glucose deprivation. Therefore, we sought to determine whether NO produced by inducible NO synthase contributes to tissue damage in this model, by using a new, highly selective, inhibitor of inducible NO synthase, N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl)acetamidine (1400W). We found that incubation with 1400W from the start of the oxygen-glucose deprivation period until the end of the experiment decreases tissue damage determined as lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) efflux 4 h after the oxygen-glucose deprivation period, the time at which inducible NO synthase expression is maximal in this model. This effect may be a result of direct inhibition of inducible NO synthase activity, raising the possibility of a clinical use of selective inhibitors of this NO synthase isoform in the management of cerebral ischaemia.
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PMID:Protective effect of N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl) acetamidine, an inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, in brain slices exposed to oxygen-glucose deprivation. 975 16

The 5-HT1A receptor agonist (-)-(R)-2-[4-[[(3,4-dihydro-2H-1-benzopyran-2-yl)methyl]amino]butyl]-1,2 -benzisothiazol-3(2H)-one1,1-dioxide monohydrochloride (BAY x 3702) was recently shown to have pronounced neuroprotective effects in rat models of cerebral ischemia and traumatic brain injury. In the present study we investigated the neuroprotective effects of BAY x 3702 in primary cultures of hippocampal and cortical neurons. Cell death was induced by 25 nM of the apoptosis inducing agent staurosporine and analyzed 24 h later by release of lactate dehydrogenase, formation of apoptotic bodies and DNA fragmentation. A significant neuroprotection was seen after pretreatment of the affected neurons with 50 pM to 1 microM BAY x 3702. The effects of BAY x 3702 were completely blocked by the selective 5-HT1A receptor antagonist N-(2-(4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl)ethyl)-N-(2-pyridinyl) cyclohexanecarboxamide trihydrochloride) (WAY-100635). These results indicate that low concentrations of BAY x 3702 protect cortical as well as hippocampal neurons from apoptotic cell death via a 5-HT1A receptor mediated pathway.
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PMID:The 5-HT1A receptor agonist BAY x 3702 prevents staurosporine-induced apoptosis. 975 43

We have investigated cell killing in cultured rat embryonic cortical neurons exposed to the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine, the excitatory amino acid N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), or a combination thereof. Our data indicate that there are several populations of neurons that differ in their response to these agents. Cultures exposed to NMDA undergo cell death typified by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) leakage which is likely primarily necrotic in that little caspase-3 activation or oligonucleosome formation is observed even when followed for 48 h. Cells exposed to staurosporine (STS) exhibit rapid, extensive activation of caspase-3 with coincident LDH leakage, oligonucleosome formation and TUNEL staining. Both LDH leakage and oligonucleosome content were significantly more elevated at 48 h than at 20 h with STS treatment while caspase-3 activity peaked early (8-20 h) and declined markedly by 48 h. Deletion of NMDA-responsive neurons by pre-treatment of the cultures with NMDA for 4 days prevented the late phase (20-48 h) increases in LDH leakage and oligonucleosomes in the remaining neuronal population. Caspase-3 activity was also completely abolished by NMDA pre-treatment. These results indicate that cells susceptible to acute NMDA-induced toxicity can be killed by non-apoptotic means when exposed to NMDA; however, they undergo a delayed, apoptotic death when exposed to STS. Interestingly, removal of NMDA-responsive cells prevents the processing of procaspase-3; thus, STS-induced apoptosis in cells resistant to NMDA-mediated killing proceeds independent of caspase-3 activation. The data indicate that nearly all neurons in these mixed cultures can undergo apoptosis in response to appropriate stimuli such as STS but that the temporal nature, and the pathways activated in response to STS, vary amongst the subpopulations of neurons. These findings may help to explain the simultaneous appearance of features of both apoptosis and necrosis observed in vivo following cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:NMDA-sensitive neurons profoundly influence delayed staurosporine-induced apoptosis in rat mixed cortical neuronal cultures. 1108 98


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