1,117 research outputs found
Evaluation of a novel rodenticide: acute sub- lethal effects of a methaemoglobin-inducing agent
TrkB agonist antibody pretreatment enhances neuronal survival and long-term sensory motor function following hypoxic ischemic injury in neonatal rats
Perinatal hypoxic ischemia (H-I) causes brain damage and long-term neurological impairments, leading to motor dysfunctions and cerebral palsy. Many studies have demonstrated that the TrkB-ERK1/2 signaling pathway plays a key role in mediating the protective effect of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) following perinatal H-I brain injury in experimental animals. In the present study, we explored the neuroprotective effects of the TrkB-specific agonist monoclonal antibody 29D7 on H-I brain injury in neonatal rats. First, we found that intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of 29D7 in normal P7 rats markedly increased the levels of phosphorylated ERK1/2 and phosphorylated AKT in neurons up to 24 h. Second, P7 rats received icv administration of 29D7 and subjected to H-I injury induced by unilateral carotid artery ligation and exposure to hypoxia (8% oxygen). We found that 29D7, to a similar extent to BDNF, significantly inhibited activation of caspase-3, a biochemical hallmark of apoptosis, following H-I injury. Third, we found that this 29D7-mediated neuroprotective action persisted at least up to 5 weeks post-H-I injury as assessed by brain tissue loss, implicating long-term neurotrophic effects rather than an acute delay of cell death. Moreover, the long-term neuroprotective effect of 29D7 was tightly correlated with sensorimotor functional recovery as assessed by a tape-removal test, while 29D7 did not significantly improve rotarod performance. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that pretreatment with the TrkB-selective agonist 29D7 significantly increases neuronal survival and behavioral recovery following neonatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury
Evolution of brain injury and neurological dysfunction after cardiac arrest in the rat - A multimodal and comprehensive model
Cardiac arrest (CA) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Due to hypoxic ischemic brain injury, CA survivors may experience variable degrees of neurological dysfunction. This study, for the first time, describes the progression of CA-induced neuropathology in the rat. CA rats displayed neurological and exploratory deficits. Brain MRI revealed cortical and striatal edema at 3 days (d), white matter (WM) damage in corpus callosum (CC), external capsule (EC), internal capsule (IC) at d7 and d14. At d3 a brain edema significantly correlated with neurological score. Parallel neuropathological studies showed neurodegeneration, reduced neuronal density in CA1 and hilus of hippocampus at d7 and d14, with cells dying at d3 in hilus. Microgliosis increased in cortex (Cx), caudate putamen (Cpu), CA1, CC, and EC up to d14. Astrogliosis increased earlier (d3 to d7) in Cx, Cpu, CC and EC compared to CA1 (d7 to d14). Plasma levels of neurofilament light (NfL) increased at d3 and remained elevated up to d14. NfL levels at d7 correlated with WM damage. The study shows the consequences up to 14d after CA in rats, introducing clinically relevant parameters such as advanced neuroimaging and blood biomarker useful to test therapeutic interventions in this model
A randomized trial of the effects of the noble gases helium and argon on neuroprotection in a rodent cardiac arrest model
Study of brain injury and neuroregenerative effects of D-cycloserine using an asphyxial cardiac arrest rat model
Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2013Cardiac arrest (CA) affects over 300,000 Americans annually and results in severe brain injury (impaired motility, memory loss, or death) due to poor recovery. Over stimulation of glutamatergic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) channel activation, allows Ca² ions to enter cells, triggers a cascade of excitotoxic events and eventual neuronal death, but down-regulation of NMDAR post arrest may contribute to progressive injury. Previous studies have indicated that NMDARs are down-regulated within hours to days after resuscitation, therefore re-stimulation of NMDARs after CA should improve neurological outcome. The purpose of this thesis was to: 1.) Implement an in vivo asphyxial CA (ACA) rat model at UAF to reproduce CA seen clinically in prenatal/pediatric populations, and 2.) Test the hypothesis that partial NMDAR agonist (D-cycloserine, DCS) would improve recovery from neuronal injury. Male Sprague Dawley rats (250-330g) were administered a low dose of DCS (10mg/kg, IP) 24 and 48hr after resuscitation from either 6 or 8-min ACA. Behavioral Neurological Deficit Scores (NDS) were taken at 2hr and daily for 7 days after ACA to assess injury. Histopathology assessed CA1 hippocampal neuronal injury. DCS had no effect on neurological improvement but the ACA model produced significant brain injury in rats regardless of CA duration.Chapter 1. General introduction to excitotoxic effects resulting from cerebral ischemia -- Chapter 2. Health implications and technique assessment of an asphyxial cardiac arrest (ACA) rat model transferred to the University of Alaska, Fairbanks (UAF) from the University of Miami School of Medicine -- Chapter 3. D-Cycloserine (DCS) activiation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) 24 & 48hr after asphyxial cardiac arrest (ACA) has no effect on hippocampal CA1 neurological deficits -- Chapter 4. General conclusion -- Appendices
High frequency deep brain stimulation of the hippocampus in a rat model for temporal lobe epilepsy
Do different anesthesia regimes affect hippocampal apoptosis and neurologic deficits in a rodent cardiac arrest model?
Project Retrosight. Understanding the returns from cardiovascular and stroke research: Case Studies
Copyright @ 2011 RAND Europe. All rights reserved. The full text article is available via the link below.This project explores the impacts arising from cardiovascular and stroke research funded 15-20 years ago and attempts to draw out aspects of the research, researcher or environment that are associated with high or low impact. The project is a case study-based review of 29 cardiovascular and stroke research grants, funded in Australia, Canada and UK between 1989 and 1993. The case studies focused on the individual grants but considered the development of the investigators and ideas involved in the research projects from initiation to the present day. Grants were selected through a stratified random selection approach that aimed to include both high- and low-impact grants. The key messages are as follows: 1) The cases reveal that a large and diverse range of impacts arose from the 29 grants studied. 2) There are variations between the impacts derived from basic biomedical and clinical research. 3) There is no correlation between knowledge production and wider impacts 4) The majority of economic impacts identified come from a minority of projects. 5) We identified factors that appear to be associated with high and low impact. This report presents the key observations of the study and an overview of the methods involved. It has been written for funders of biomedical and health research and health services, health researchers, and policy makers in those fields. It will also be of interest to those involved in research and impact evaluation.This study was initiated with internal funding from RAND Europe and HERG, with continuing funding from the UK National Institute for Health Research, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the National Heart Foundation of Australia. The UK Stroke Association and the British Heart Foundation provided support in kind through access to their archives
A randomized trial of the effects of the noble gases helium and argon on neuroprotection in a rodent cardiac arrest model.
BACKGROUND
The noble gas xenon is considered as a neuroprotective agent, but availability of the gas is limited. Studies on neuroprotection with the abundant noble gases helium and argon demonstrated mixed results, and data regarding neuroprotection after cardiac arrest are scant. We tested the hypothesis that administration of 50% helium or 50% argon for 24 h after resuscitation from cardiac arrest improves clinical and histological outcome in our 8 min rat cardiac arrest model.
METHODS
Forty animals had cardiac arrest induced with intravenous potassium/esmolol and were randomized to post-resuscitation ventilation with either helium/oxygen, argon/oxygen or air/oxygen for 24 h. Eight additional animals without cardiac arrest served as reference, these animals were not randomized and not included into the statistical analysis. Primary outcome was assessment of neuronal damage in histology of the region I of hippocampus proper (CA1) from those animals surviving until day 5. Secondary outcome was evaluation of neurobehavior by daily testing of a Neurodeficit Score (NDS), the Tape Removal Test (TRT), a simple vertical pole test (VPT) and the Open Field Test (OFT). Because of the non-parametric distribution of the data, the histological assessments were compared with the Kruskal-Wallis test. Treatment effect in repeated measured assessments was estimated with a linear regression with clustered robust standard errors (SE), where normality is less important.
RESULTS
Twenty-nine out of 40 rats survived until day 5 with significant initial deficits in neurobehavioral, but rapid improvement within all groups randomized to cardiac arrest. There were no statistical significant differences between groups neither in the histological nor in neurobehavioral assessment.
CONCLUSIONS
The replacement of air with either helium or argon in a 50:50 air/oxygen mixture for 24 h did not improve histological or clinical outcome in rats subjected to 8 min of cardiac arrest
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