Literature DB >> 1686604

Neurocytotoxicity: pharmacological implications.

B K Siesjö1, H Memezawa, M L Smith.   

Abstract

Recent data suggest that brain damage in ischemia, hypoglycemia, and several other brain diseases is caused by excitotoxic mechanisms which are triggered by presynaptic release of glutamate and related excitatory amino acids, and which involve an abnormal postsynaptic influx of calcium into cells containing a high density of glutamate receptors. This contention is supported by results demonstrating reduction of infarct size in focal ischemia due to middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion, and amelioration of neuronal necrosis in hypoglycemic coma, by antagonist which block the NMDA type of glutamate receptor. These results underscore the pathogenetic role of calcium influx into energy-compromised cells since the NMDA receptor-linked ion channel has a high conductance to calcium. The issue has been clouded by the inability of NMDA antagonists to ameliorate brain damage due to cardiac arrest, or to forebrain ischemia in rats and gerbils. In these conditions, however, an AMPA receptor blocker (NBQX) has been found efficacious. These results demonstrate that the pathophysiology of ischemic lesions is different in the cardiac arrest type of ischemia and in lesions due to MCA occlusion, and demand an explanation of the differences in therapeutic response. Tentatively, the cardiac arrest type of ischemia is so dense that multiple calcium conductances are activated in the energy-deprived tissue, explaining why any drug which acts on only one of them (such as an NMDA antagonist) cannot prevent cellular calcium overload. Furthermore the ultimate brain damage, which is often conspicuously delayed, may be secondary to upregulation of synaptic efficacy, causing increased calcium cycling and calcium-related damage. In this situation, an AMPA receptor blocker may be efficacious because it blocks "fast" excitation and Na+ influx, an "upstream" event which causes "downstream" calcium influx via multiple pathways. In the perifocal ("penumbra") zone of a stroke lesion, the situation is different since depolarisation is initially moderate and/or intermittent. Furthermore, since ATP is still produced (albeit at a reduced rate) the problem is one of a disturbed pump/leak relationship. Then, blockade of a major calcium-carrying channel by NMDA receptor blockers, or of the trigger to depolarisation by an AMPA receptor antagonist, may improve the pump/leak relationship and carry cells in the penumbra over a critical period.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1686604     DOI: 10.1111/j.1472-8206.1991.tb00765.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fundam Clin Pharmacol        ISSN: 0767-3981            Impact factor:   2.748


  5 in total

1.  Effects of the novel NMDA-receptor antagonist SDZ EAA 494 on memory and attention in humans.

Authors:  S Rockstroh; M Emre; A Tarral; R Pokorny
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 4.530

2.  Effect of serum on intracellular calcium homeostasis and survival of primary cortical and hippocampal CA1 neurons following brief glutamate treatment.

Authors:  A Uto; E Dux; K A Hossmann
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  1994-12       Impact factor: 3.584

3.  Acute and delayed protective effects of pharmacologically induced hypothermia in an intracerebral hemorrhage stroke model of mice.

Authors:  S Wei; J Sun; J Li; L Wang; C L Hall; T A Dix; O Mohamad; L Wei; S P Yu
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2013-07-30       Impact factor: 3.590

4.  Protein synthesis in the hippocampal slice: transient inhibition by glutamate and lasting inhibition by ischemia.

Authors:  B Djuricic; G Röhn; W Paschen; K A Hossmann
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  1994-09       Impact factor: 3.584

5.  An immunocytochemical study of glutamate receptors and glutamine synthetase in the hippocampus of rats injected with kainate.

Authors:  W Y Ong; S K Leong; L J Garey; R Reynolds; A W Liang
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  1996-05       Impact factor: 1.972

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.