Stroke, Vol 17, 477-482, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
FS Silverstein, K Buchanan, C Hudson and MV Johnston
We examined the impact of pre-treatment with the calcium antagonist
flunarizine on the development of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in the
immature rat. Unilateral carotid artery ligation and subsequent exposure to
2 hours of 8% oxygen in 7-day-old rats was used as a model for perinatal
hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. This procedure leads to atrophy in the
cerebral hemisphere ipsilateral to carotid occlusion, with prominent foci
of neuronal infarction in the caudate-putamen (striatum). The morphologic
injury develops after 1 1/2 hours of hypoxia; and there is an equivalent
time threshold for duration of hypoxic exposure needed to acutely stimulate
dopamine release in the ipsilateral striatum. Parenteral administration of
30 mg/kg of flunarizine before hypoxic exposure limited both the release of
dopamine acutely and the extent of morphologic damage observed two weeks
after the insult. Oral administration of 30 mg/kg of flunarizine in a
different vehicle prevented morphologic damage but had no effect on
stimulated dopamine release. The drug vehicle for the parenteral
preparation also prevented tissue injury, but to a lesser degree than
flunarizine. However the parenteral vehicle was equipotent with parenteral
flunarizine in limiting acute stimulation of dopamine release. The results
demonstrate that flunarizine has potent neuroprotective properties against
morphologic brain injury from hypoxia-ischemia, acting by a mechanism which
is independent of effects on dopamine release.
ARTICLES
Flunarizine limits hypoxia-ischemia induced morphologic injury in immature rat brain
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