| Literature DB >> 25009531 |
Peter Y Cai1, Aakash Bodhit2, Roselle Derequito2, Saeed Ansari3, Fawzi Abukhalil2, Spandana Thenkabail2, Sarah Ganji2, Pradeepan Saravanapavan2, Chandana C Shekar2, Sharatchandra Bidari4, Michael F Waters5, Vishnumurthy Shushrutha Hedna2.
Abstract
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is currently Food and Drug Administration-approved for treatment of both medically refractory partial-onset seizures and severe, recurrent refractory depression, which has failed to respond to medical interventions. Because of its ability to regulate mechanisms well-studied in neuroscience, such as norepinephrine and serotonin release, the vagus nerve may play an important role in regulating cerebral blood flow, edema, inflammation, glutamate excitotoxicity, and neurotrophic processes. There is strong evidence that these same processes are important in stroke pathophysiology. We reviewed the literature for the role of VNS in improving ischemic stroke outcomes by performing a systematic search for publications in Medline (1966-2014) with keywords "VNS AND stroke" in subject headings and key words with no language restrictions. Of the 73 publications retrieved, we identified 7 studies from 3 different research groups that met our final inclusion criteria of research studies addressing the role of VNS in ischemic stroke. Results from these studies suggest that VNS has promising efficacy in reducing stroke volume and attenuating neurological deficits in ischemic stroke models. Given the lack of success in Phase III trials for stroke neuroprotection, it is important to develop new therapies targeting different neuroprotective pathways. Further studies of the possible role of VNS, through normally physiologically active mechanisms, in ischemic stroke therapeutics should be conducted in both animal models and clinical studies. In addition, recent advent of a non-invasive, transcutaneous VNS could provide the potential for easier clinical translation.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral blood flow; glutamate excitotoxicity; middle cerebral artery occlusion; neuroinflammation; stroke
Year: 2014 PMID: 25009531 PMCID: PMC4067569 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2014.00107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Effects of vagus nerve stimulation. Vagus nerve stimulation has been shown to modulate the release of a variety of factors that regulate important mechanisms in stroke pathophysiology, such as cerebral blood flow, neurotrophism, neurogenesis, excitotoxicity, and inflammation.
Figure 2Model of ischemic stroke acute pathophysiology. Detrimental acute effects of ischemic stroke can be conceptualized into two separate but highly inter-related physiological entities, neurochemical and neuroinflammation injury, that ultimately lead to cellular damage and death. These detrimental effects function in a positive feedback loop.
Figure 3Study inclusion criteria methodology.
Detailed study characteristics and treatment.
| Study | Study groups | Ischemia model | VNS stimulation | VNS duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ay et al. ( | Right VNS experiment gr 1 Right VNS experiment gr 2 Control gr ( | Right TMCAO (120 min) | 3 h | |
| Summary: right VNS reduced infarct size and improved functional scores with two different stimulation protocols after TMCAO | ||||
| Ay et al. ( | Right VNS experiment gr Control gr ( | Right TMCAO (120 min – right VNS) | 1 h | |
| Left VNS experiment gr | Right TMCAO (105 min – left VNS) Control gr ( | 1 h | ||
| Summary: both right and left VNS reduced infarct size and improved functional scores | ||||
| Ay and Ay ( | Right VNS experiment gr with intact SPG Right VNS experiment gr with SPG ablation | Right TMCAO (120 min – right VNS) | 1 h | |
| Summary: right VNS reduced infarct size and improved functional scores in SPG-intact and SPG-damaged animals | ||||
| Hiraki et al. ( | Right VNS experiment gr ( | Right TMCAO (120 min) | 1 h | |
| Summary: right VNS reduced infarct size and improved functional scores | ||||
| Sun et al. ( | Right VNS experiment gr Control group ( | Right TMCAO (120 min) | 1 h | |
| Right VNS experiment gr Control gr ( | Right PMCAO with photochromatic occlusion | 1 h | ||
| Summary: right VNS reduced infarct size after both TMCAO and PMCAO but only improved functional scores after TMCAO and not PMCAO | ||||
| Khodaparast et al. ( | Left VNS experiment gr ( | Endothelin-1 injection at forelimb area of primary motor cortex | 25 days | |
| Summary: left VNS paired with rehabilitative training restored forelimb strength to pre-lesion performance | ||||
| Khodaparast et al. ( | Left VNS experiment gr ( | Endothelin-1 injection at forelimb area of primary motor cortex | 25 days | |
| Summary: left VNS paired with rehabilitative training restored forelimb function to pre-lesion performance | ||||
MCAO, middle cerebral artery occlusion; VNS, vagus nerve stimulation; gr, group; TMCAO, temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion; PMCAO, permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion; SPG, sphenopalatine ganglion.
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