| Literature DB >> 31920617 |
Abstract
Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) is one of the most frequent causes of brain injury in the newborn. From a pathophysiological standpoint, a complex process takes place at the cellular and tissue level during the development of newborn brain damage in the absence of oxygen. Initially, the lesion is triggered by a deficit in the supply of oxygen to cells and tissues, causing a primary energy insufficiency. Subsequently, high energy phosphate levels recover transiently (the latent phase) that is followed by a secondary phase, in which many of the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in the development of neonatal brain damage ensue (i.e., excitotoxicity, massive influx of Ca2+, oxidative and nitrosative stress, inflammation). This leads to cell death by necrosis or apoptosis. Eventually, a tertiary phase occurs, characterized by the persistence of brain damage for months and even years after the HI insult. Hypothermia is the only therapeutic strategy against HIE that has been incorporated into neonatal intensive care units with limited success. Thus, there is an urgent need for agents with the capacity to curtail acute and chronic damage in HIE. Melatonin, a molecule of unusual phylogenetic conservation present in all known aerobic organisms, has a potential role as a neuroprotective agent both acutely and chronically in HIE. Melatonin displays a remarkable antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity and is capable to cross the blood-brain barrier readily. Moreover, in many animal models of brain degeneration, melatonin was effective to impair chronic mechanisms of neuronal death. In animal models, and in a limited number of clinical studies, melatonin increased the level of protection developed by hypothermia in newborn asphyxia. This review article summarizes briefly the available therapeutic strategies in HIE and assesses the role of melatonin as a potentially relevant therapeutic tool to cover the hypoxia-ischemia phase and the secondary and tertiary phases following a hypoxic-ischemic insult.Entities:
Keywords: hypothermia; hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy; inflammation; melatonin; neurodegeneration; oxidative stress
Year: 2019 PMID: 31920617 PMCID: PMC6914689 DOI: 10.3389/fnsyn.2019.00034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Synaptic Neurosci ISSN: 1663-3563
FIGURE 1Melatonin activity in HIE. Insult results in primary (acute phase) and secondary energy failure (secondary phase) in the brain while brain damage (tertiary phase) continues to occur months to years after the injury with decreased plasticity and reduced number of neurons. Melatonin has the unique property to cover all phases including attenuation of tertiary brain damage, hence expanding the therapeutic window to long-term outcome. CFB, cerebral blood flow.
Melatonin activity in animal models of HIE.
| Melatonin provides neuroprotection in the late-gestation fetal sheep brain in response to umbilical cord occlusion | 1 mg bolus i.v., then 1 mg/h for 2 h | |
| Melatonin protects from the long-term consequences of a neonatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in rats (behavioral asymmetry, learning deficits) | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In 1-day-old Wistar rats subjected to hypoxia melatonin treatment reduced VEGF and NO levels as well as leakage of horseradish peroxidase in choroid plexus | 10 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Melatonin normalizes free iron, total isoprostanes, and total neuroprostanes in a rat model of neonatal HI encephalopathy | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Melatonin was not able to reduce cortical infarct volume in a rat neonatal stroke model but strongly reduces inflammation and promotes subsequent myelination in the white matter | 20 mg/kg i.p. (two doses) | |
| In neonatal rats subjected to HI melatonin reduced the percent infarcted brain volume and TUNEL positivity | 20 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Treatment with melatonin after neonatal HI in rats led to a neuroprotective effect reducing cell death, white matter demyelination and reactive astrogliosis | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Melatonin reduces oxidative stress and inflammatory cells recruitment and glial cells activation in cerebral cortex after neonatal HI damage of rats | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In a neonatal rat model of HI brain injury, melatonin, and topiramate, administered either alone or in combination significantly reduced the percent infarcted brain volume and number of TUNEL positive cells | 20 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In a piglet model of perinatal asphyxia, melatonin-augmented hypothermia significantly reduced the hypoxic-ischemic-induced increase of lactate/ | 5 mg/kg/h over 6 h started at 10 min after resuscitation and repeated at 24 h | |
| In neonatal rats subjected to HI, melatonin administration reduced the neuron splicing of XBP-1 mRNA, the increased phosphorylation of eIF2α, and elevated expression of chaperone proteins GRP78 and Hsp70. Melatonin also prevented the depletion of SIRT-1 induced by HI | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Melatonin prevents cell death and mitochondrial dysfunction via a SIRT1-dependent mechanism during ischemic-stroke in mice | 10 mg/kg twice | |
| No improvement of neuronal metabolism in the reperfusion phase with melatonin treatment after HI brain injury in the neonatal rat was seen | 10 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In a neonatal rat model of HI brain injury, the integrity of the auditory pathway in the brainstem was preserved by melatonin treatment | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In a rat neonatal model of HIE, melatonin reduced necrotic cell death and decreased activation of the early phases of intrinsic apoptosis, with a concomitant increased expression and activity of SIRT1, reduced expression and acetylation of p53, and increased autophagy activation | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Melatonin alleviates brain and peripheral tissue edema in a neonatal rat model of HIE, as assessed by expression of the edema related proteins AQP-4, ZO-1, and occludin | 10 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In postnatal day 7 rat pups subjected to unilateral HI, pre-treatment with melatonin significantly reduced brain damage with 30% recovery in tissue loss compared to vehicle-treated animals. Autophagy and apoptotic cell death were significantly inhibited after melatonin treatment | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Characterization of gene expression in the rat brainstem after neonatal HI injury melatonin has retarded effects on gene activation | 15 mg/kg i.p. | |
| After acute HI insult in preterm fetal sheep, melatonin administration decreased apoptosis, inflammation and oxidative stress within the white matter. It also increased oligodendrocyte cell number within the periventricular white matter only and improved myelin density within the subcortical but not the striatal white matter | 0.2 mg bolus i.v. to the fetus at 2 h after HI followed by an infusion of 0.1 mg/h for 24 h | |
| Melatonin acts in synergy with hypothermia to reduce oxygen-glucose deprivation-induced cell death in rat hippocampal slices | 25 μM | |
| Melatonin protects from newborn hypoxic-ischemic brain injury melatonin in murine experimental models through MT1 receptor | 5–10 mg/kg i.p. | |
| Repetitive neonatal melatonin treatment prevents from functional deficits in a rat model of cerebral palsy | 20 mg/kg i.p. | |
| In a lamb model of perinatal asphyxia melatonin (i.v. or as a transdermal patch) alleviated acidosis and altered determinants of encephalopathy. Asphyxia significantly increased brain white and gray matter apoptotic cell death, lipid peroxidation and neuroinflammation, all effects mitigated by melatonin | 60 mg in 24 h; i.v. or transdermal patch | |
| Melatonin was administered at 2 h and 6 h after hypoxia-ischemia with cooling in a piglet model. Neuroprotection was dose dependent; 15 mg/kg melatonin started 2 h after HI, given over 6 h, was well tolerated and augmented hypothermic protection in sensorimotor cortex | 5 or 15 mg/kg i.v. |
Studies including treatment of HIE patients with melatonin.
| 20 asphyxiated newborns | Open-label study | 10 HIE newborns were treated with a total of 80 mg as eight oral doses | Serum malondi-aldehyde and nitrite/nitrate concentration | In the asphyxiated newborns given melatonin, there were significant reductions in malondialdehyde and nitrite/nitrate levels at both 12 and 24 h. Three of the 10 asphyxiated children not given melatonin died within 72 h after birth; none of the 10 asphyxiated newborns given melatonin died | |
| 74 preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome | Open-label study | 40 preterm infants were treated with a total of 100 mg/kg as 10 infusions | IL-6, IL-8, TNFα in tracheobronchial aspirate and serum nitrite/nitrate concentration | Compared with the melatonin-treated respiratory distress syndrome newborns, in the untreated infants the concentrations of IL-6, IL-8, and TNFα 7 days after onset of the study were higher. In addition, nitrite/nitrate levels at all time points were higher in the untreated respiratory distress syndrome newborns than in the melatonin-treated babies | |
| 120 preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome | Open-label study | 60 preterm infants were treated with a total of 100 mg/kg as 10 infusions | Serum IL-6, IL-8, TNFα and nitrite/nitrate concentration | Melatonin treatment reduced the proinflammatory cytokines and improved the clinical outcome | |
| 110 preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome | Open-label study | 55 HIE newborns were treated with a total of 100 mg/kg as 10 infusions | IL-6, IL-8, TNFα in trachea-bronchial aspirate and serum nitrite/nitrate concentration | Melatonin treatment reduced the proinflammatory cytokines and improved the clinical outcome | |
| 18 preterm infants | Open-label study | Total of 0.04–0.6 μg/kg over 0.5–6 h as an infusion | Pharmaco-kinetic profiles | The pharmacokinetic profile of melatonin in preterm infants differs from that of adults so dosage of melatonin for preterm infants cannot be extrapolated from adult studies | |
| 30 HIE newborns, 15 healthy newborns | Randomized prospective trial | 15 HIE newborns were treated with a total of 50 mg/kg as five daily enteral doses | Serum melatonin, plasma SOD, serum NO, EEG, MRI, neurologic evaluations | At day 5, the melatonin/hypothermia group had greater increase in melatonin and decline in NO and less decline in SOD. The melatonin/hypothermia group had fewer seizures on follow-up EEG and less white matter abnormalities on MRI. At 6 months, the melatonin/hypothermia group had improved survival without neurological or developmental abnormalities | |
| 15 preterm infants; 5 preterm infants with low dose, 5 preterm infants with medium dose, 5 preterm infants with high dose | Open-label study | Total of 0.5 mg/kg or 3 mg/kg or 15 mg/kg as 1 or 3 intragastric boluses | Pharmacokinetic profiles | A different pharmacokinetic profile in premature newborns, compared to adults. The high peak plasma concentrations and the long half-life indicate that in the neonatal clinical setting, it is possible to obtain and maintain high serum concentrations using a single administration of melatonin repeated every 12/24 h | |
| 80 HIE newborns | Randomized prospective trial | 40 HIE newborns received melatonin 10 mg orally via nasogastric tube at admission | Newborns were followed for 28 days to see the effect of melatonin in terms of survival rate | Administration of melatonin as an adjunct therapy in the management of newborns with HIE led to improved survival rate | |
| 5 neonates with HIE undergoing hypo-thermia | Open-label study | Melatonin was infused at 0.5 mg/kg | Pharmacokinetic profiles | Melatonin half-life and clearance were prolonged, and the distribution volume decreased compared to adults. Hypothermia did not affect melatonin pharmacokinetics |