Stroke, Vol 21, 119-123, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
JA Reitan, ND Kien, S Thorup and G Corkill
We studied the effects of graded exposure to hyperbaric (1,875 mm Hg)
oxygen therapy in an acute stroke model prepared by unilateral carotid
artery interruption in gerbils. Pentobarbital alone, superoxide dismutase
alone, two periods of hyperbaric oxygen alone, and each agent combined with
hyperbaric oxygen were administered to investigate possible mechanisms of
protection from cerebral ischemia. Survival rates and neurologic deficit
scores over 5 days in all treated groups were compared with those in a
control group. Survival rates in the groups subjected to 2 (63.9 +/- 4.0%)
and 4 hours (70.1 +/- 5.2%) of hyperbaric oxygen alone were significantly
higher than in the control group (53.6 +/- 4.2%). The group treated with
pentobarbital alone also demonstrated increased survival (69.8 +/- 7.0%),
but the combination of therapeutic regimens offered no apparent additive
protection. By 5 days there were no differences in the neurologic deficit
scores of the survivors in the groups. The toxic pulmonary effects of
hyperbaric oxygen were assessed in a pilot LD50 study. The pressure used
caused no mortality during 4 hours of exposure, and the calculated LD50 was
7.26 hours. This investigation demonstrates that graded doses of hyperbaric
oxygen given after the insult increase survival in a gerbil model of
stroke.
ARTICLES
Hyperbaric oxygen increases survival following carotid ligation in gerbils
Department of Anesthesiology, University of California School of Medicine, Davis 95616.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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