Literature DB >> 15287906

Effects of post-injury hypothermia and nerve growth factor infusion on antioxidant enzyme activity in the rat: implications for clinical therapies.

Steven T DeKosky1, Eric E Abrahamson, Kevin M Taffe, C Edward Dixon, Patrick M Kochanek, Milos D Ikonomovic.   

Abstract

The pathological sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI) include increased oxidative stress due to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Regulation of ROS levels following TBI is determined primarily by antioxidant enzyme activity that in turn can be influenced by nerve growth factor (NGF). Hypothermia is one of the current therapies designed to combat the deleterious effects of TBI. However, it has been shown to suppress post-trauma increases in NGF levels in rat brain. The present study sought to determine whether post-injury hypothermia also impairs the antioxidant response to injury, and if such an effect could be reversed by infusion of exogenous NGF. We employed a lateral controlled cortical impact injury model in rat, followed by moderate hypothermia treatment with supplemental intracerebroventricular infusion of NGF or vehicle. The time course of changes in post-injury/intervention levels of NGF and activity of three major enzymes responsible for ROS scavenging, catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), was determined in the hippocampus. Relative to levels in injured, normothermic animals, hypothermia treatment not only suppressed NGF levels, but also attenuated CAT and GPx activity, and increased SOD activity. Infusion of NGF in injured, hypothermia-treated animals was ineffective in restoring hippocampal antioxidant enzymes activity to levels produced after injury under normothermic conditions, although it was able to increase septal cholinergic (choline acetyltransferase) enzyme activity. These results have implications for clinical treatment of TBI, demonstrating that moderate hypothermia suppresses NGF and the antioxidant response after TBI; the latter cannot be countered by exogenous NGF administration.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15287906     DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2004.02575.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurochem        ISSN: 0022-3042            Impact factor:   5.372


  10 in total

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Review 3.  Bench-to-bedside review: Hypothermia in traumatic brain injury.

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4.  Blockage of the upregulation of voltage-gated sodium channel nav1.3 improves outcomes after experimental traumatic brain injury.

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5.  Therapeutic hypothermia preserves antioxidant defenses after severe traumatic brain injury in infants and children.

Authors:  Hülya Bayir; P David Adelson; Stephen R Wisniewski; Paul Shore; YiChen Lai; Danielle Brown; Keri L Janesko-Feldman; Valerian E Kagan; Patrick M Kochanek
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Review 6.  Protection in animal models of brain and spinal cord injury with mild to moderate hypothermia.

Authors:  W Dalton Dietrich; Coleen M Atkins; Helen M Bramlett
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7.  Attenuation of brain nitrostative and oxidative damage by brain cooling during experimental traumatic brain injury.

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8.  Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase expression in the postnatal rat brain following an excitotoxic injury.

Authors:  Hugo Peluffo; Laia Acarin; Maryam Faiz; Bernardo Castellano; Berta Gonzalez
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9.  Neuroprotection from NMDA excitotoxic lesion by Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase gene delivery to the postnatal rat brain by a modular protein vector.

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10.  An experimental study: does the neuroprotective effect increase when hypothermia deepens after traumatic brain injury?

Authors:  Abdullah Sadik Girisgin; Erdal Kalkan; Mehmet Ergin; Fatih Keskin; Zerrin Defne Dundar; Sedat Kebapcioglu; Sedat Kocak; Basar Cander
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  10 in total

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