| Literature DB >> 32894054 |
Alireza Mirkheshti1, Alireza Shakeri1, Elham Memary1, Mansoureh Baniasadi2, Jalal Zaringhalam3, Ardeshir Tajbakhsh1, Marzieh Mirzaei4, Elena Lak5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bupivacaine, an amid-type local anesthetic, is widely used for clinical patients especially in pregnant women. In addition to neurotoxicity effect of bupivacaine, it can cross the placenta, accumulates in this tissue and retained in fetal tissues. Nevertheless, whether bupivacaine can cause neurotoxicity in fetus remains unclear. Hence, this study was design to investigate the effects of maternal bupivacaine use on fetus hippocampal cell apoptosis and the possible related mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: Akt; Apoptosis; Bupivacaine; Pregnancy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32894054 PMCID: PMC7487602 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-020-01143-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Fig. 1Maternally administered bupivacaine, significantly increase cleaved caspase-3 expression in the fetal hippocampus. Representative cropped western blot of cleaved caspase-3 (19 kDa) which is normalized to beta-Actin. Data are represented as mean ± SEM (n = 6 rats/group). ***P < 0.001: comparison of cleaved caspase-3 protein band intensity between different groups. Full-length blots are presented in Supplementary Fig. 1
Fig. 2Maternal bupivacaine usage, significantly increased cleaved caspase-8 expression in the fetal hippocampus. Representative cropped western blot of cleaved caspase-8 (18 kDa) which is normalized to beta-Actin. Data are represented as mean ± SEM (n = 6 rats/group). ***P < 0.001: comparison of cleaved caspase-8 protein band intensity between different groups. Full-length blots are presented in Supplementary Fig. 2
Fig. 3Maternal administration of bupivacaine significantly decreased Akt activity in fetal hippocampus. Representative cropped western blot of P. Akt (60 kDa) which is normalized to T.Akt. Data are represented as mean ± SEM (n = 6 rats/group). ***P < 0.001: comparison of P. Akt protein band intensity between different groups. Full-length blots are presented in Supplementary Fig. 3