| Literature DB >> 23369273 |
Ecem Esencan1, Simge Yuksel, Yusuf Berk Tosun, Alexander Robinot, Ihsan Solaroglu, John H Zhang.
Abstract
Xenon is a medical gas capable of establishing neuroprotection, inducing anesthesia as well as serving in modern laser technology and nuclear medicine as a contrast agent. In spite of its high cost, its lack of side effects, safe cardiovascular and organoprotective profile and effective neuroprotective role after hypoxic-ischemic injury (HI) favor its applications in clinics. Xenon performs its anesthetic and neuroprotective functions through binding to glycine site of glutamatergic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor competitively and blocking it. This blockage inhibits the overstimulation of NMDA receptors, thus preventing their following downstream calcium accumulating cascades. Xenon is also used in combination therapies together with hypothermia or sevoflurane. The neuroprotective effects of xenon and hypothermia cooperate synergistically whether they are applied synchronously or asynchronously. Distinguishing properties of Xenon promise for innovations in medical gas field once further studies are fulfilled and Xenon's high cost is overcome.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23369273 PMCID: PMC3626616 DOI: 10.1186/2045-9912-3-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Gas Res ISSN: 2045-9912
Figure 1Schema Summarizing Xenon’s applications: Noble gas xenon is used in various fields. In medicine, Xenon can be utilized as a neuroprotective and anesthetic agent. It can also be used as a contrast agent in imaging. Plus it has the potential to be used in the field of optics.
Figure 2Mechanism of Xenon’s neuroprotective action: The underlying mechanism of action which Xenon exerts its neuroprotective effect is based on blockage of NMDA receptors. Without Xenon blockage, increase in cytoplasmic calcium concentration due to overstimulation of NMDA receptors leads to cell death by various pathways. Xenon inhibits these cascades by competitively binding to glycine site of NMDA receptors.
In-vivo and in-vitro models demonstrating the neuroprotective effects of Xenon
| Bantel et al., 2009 | Neuronal damage due to OGD | Preconditioning with 75% Xenon for 2 hours | Xenon preconditioning reduces neuronal injury through activation of plasmalemmal ATP sensitive potassium channel [ |
| Liu et al, 2011 Wilhelm et al, 2002 | Neuronal damage due to OGD | Xenon saturated medium for 24 hours (in vitro) | Reduction in lactate dehydrogenase release proves that Xenon reduces OGD induced neuronal cell death at subanesthetic concentrations [ |
| Homi et al, 2003 | MCAO in mice | 70%, 35% Xenon during middle cerebral artery occlusion for 1 hour | Application of Xenon during MCAO reduces total infarct size and augments neurologic outcome [ |
| Horiguchi et al, 2006 | MCAO in mice | Preconditioning with 70% xenon for 2 hours | Xenon preconditioning induces neuroprotection in mice model of middle cerebral artery occlusion [ |
| Hobbs et al, 2008 | Neonatal HI | Hypothermia (32°C) with inhalation of 50% Xenon for 3 hours | Combination of hypothermia and Xenon increases neuroprotection from 37% (hypothermia only) to 76% [ |
| Martin et al, 2007 | Neonatal HI | Asynchronous application of Xenon (20%) and hypothermia (35°C) with 1 hour and 5 hours gap in between the treatments | Asynchronous combination of Xenon and hypothermia reduces brain infarction significantly [ |
| Ma et al, 2006 Luo et al, 2008 | Neuronatal damage due to OGD | Combination of 20% Xenon and 0.75% sevoflurane preconditioning | Combination of Xenon and sevoflurane preconditioning induces long term neuroprotection by enhanced phosphorylated cyclic adenosine monophosphate response element binding protection signaling. [ |
In oxygen glucose deprivation induced neuronal damage and middle cerebral artery occlusion in mice models, both Xenon preconditioning and its co-administration with insult grant neuroprotection. Combinations of Xenon with hypothermia in neonatal hypoxia-ischemia model and with sevoflurane in oxygen glucose deprivation induced neuronal damage model also enhance neuroprotection.