Stroke, Vol 20, 70-77, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
JW Lazarewicz, R Pluta, E Salinska and M Puka
We investigated the effects of intravenous application of nimodipine on the
neurophysiologic, biochemical, and morphologic consequences of 15 minutes
of global cerebral ischemia in seven rabbits. In vivo dialysis of the
hippocampus was used to determine changes in extracellular concentrations
of extracellular calcium and amino acids and blood-brain barrier
permeability. Ischemia without treatment produced a rapid disappearance of
electroencephalographic activity, a decrease in the concentration of
extracellular calcium, the release of neuroactive amino acids, and leakage
of methionine to the tissue fluid, plus a significant increase of the
blood-brain barrier permeability to fluorescein. Except for permeability
and electroencephalographic activity, these parameters normalized during 45
minutes of recirculation; permeability and activity failed to normalize
completely during 3 hours of recirculation. After 3 hours of recirculation,
morphologic changes in the CA1 hippocampal area were observed. Treatment
with nimodipine significantly enhanced electroencephalographic activity
recovery and normalization during recirculation, reduced the decrease in
extracellular calcium concentration, and prevented the increased
permeability of the blood- brain barrier. Nimodipine protected the CA1 area
from early morphologic changes and reduced leakage of methionine from brain
cells. The beneficial cytoprotective effect of nimodipine, probably related
to normalization of calcium homeostasis and blood-brain barrier
permeability after ischemia, may reflect both vascular and cellular sites
of action.
ARTICLES
Beneficial effect of nimodipine on metabolic and functional disturbances in rabbit hippocampus following complete cerebral ischemia
Department of Neurochemistry, Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw.
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