Literature DB >> 12062471

Regulation of interstitial excitatory amino acid concentrations after cortical contusion injury.

Marie E Rose1, Michele B Huerbin, John Melick, Donald W Marion, Alan M Palmer, Joanne K Schiding, Patrick M Kochanek, Steven H Graham.   

Abstract

Increases in brain interstitial excitatory amino acid (EAA(I)) concentrations after ischemia are ameliorated by use-dependent Na+ channel antagonists and by supplementing interstitial glucose, but the regulation of EAA(I) after traumatic brain injury (TBI) is unknown. We studied the regulation of EAA(I) after TBI using the controlled cortical impact model in rats. To monitor changes in EAA(I), microdialysis probes were placed in the cortex adjacent to the contusion and in the ipsilateral hippocampus. Significant increases in dialysate EAA(I) after TBI were found compared to levels measured in sham controls. Treatment with the use-dependent Na+ channel antagonist 619C89 (30 mg/kg i.v.) did not significantly decrease dialysate glutamate compared to vehicle controls in hippocampus (10.4+/-2.4 vs. 11.9+/-1.6 microM), but there was significant decrease in dialysate glutamate in cortex after 619C89 treatment (19.3+/-3 vs. 12.6+/-1.1 microM P<0.05). Addition of 30 mM glucose to the dialysate, a treatment that decreases EAA(I) after ischemia, had no significant effect upon dialysate glutamate after TBI in cortex (20.0+/-4.9 vs. 11.7+/-3.4 microM) or in hippocampus (10.9+/-2.0 vs. 8.9+/-2.4 microM). These results suggest that neither increased release of EAAs due to Na+ channel-mediated depolarization nor failure of glutamate reuptake due to glucose deprivation can explain the majority of the increase in EAA(I) following TBI.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12062471     DOI: 10.1016/s0006-8993(02)02445-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  9 in total

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Authors:  Ying Deng-Bryant; Mayumi L Prins; David A Hovda; Neil G Harris
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Authors:  Andrew Sauerbeck; Jianxin Gao; Ryan Readnower; Mei Liu; James R Pauly; Guoying Bing; Patrick G Sullivan
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4.  Metabolic fate of glucose in rats with traumatic brain injury and pyruvate or glucose treatments: A NMR spectroscopy study.

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5.  Metabolic and histologic effects of sodium pyruvate treatment in the rat after cortical contusion injury.

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Review 6.  5-hydroxytryptamine1A (5-HT1A) receptor agonists: A decade of empirical evidence supports their use as an efficacious therapeutic strategy for brain trauma.

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7.  Long-term gliosis and molecular changes in the cervical spinal cord of the rhesus monkey after traumatic brain injury.

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Review 8.  Insights into the metabolic response to traumatic brain injury as revealed by (13)C NMR spectroscopy.

Authors:  Brenda L Bartnik-Olson; Neil G Harris; Katsunori Shijo; Richard L Sutton
Journal:  Front Neuroenergetics       Date:  2013-10-04

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  9 in total

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