Literature DB >> 9606028

Pharmacological modulation of the refractory period of retinal spreading depression.

S Brand1, V M Fernandes de Lima, W Hanke.   

Abstract

Spreading depression (SD) is a propagating wave of neuronal activity in the central nervous system and may play a role in triggering classical migraine. The retina serves as a model system for examining the phenomenon of SD and the influence of various drugs on it. After a SD wave passes a new wave can not be elicited in the absolute refractory period of the tissue (about 2 min), this is followed by a relative refractory phase of about 20 min before complete recovery. The aim of the present study was to describe the effects of Ba2+, a blocker of glial cell K+ channels, octanol, a gap junction blocker and diethylbarbiturate, a GABA(A) chloride channel-activating drug on the modulation of the refractory period of the retinal SD and to examine the possible mechanisms underlying this modulation. Two properties of SD, which are highly sensitive to any changes in the experimental conditions, are the propagation velocity of the wave and the accompanying slow negative potential shift. We measured the propagation velocity and the field potential amplitude in the chicken retina as a function of the recovery state of the tissue under control conditions and compared them with measurements in the presence of Ba2+, octanol or diethylbarbiturate. Under these conditions the manner of the recovery of the tissue changed significantly. Although after blocking the glial (Müller) cell K+ channels with Ba2+ (200 microM), the curve of recovery of the propagation velocity to its maximum value has the same shape as under control conditions, the propagation velocity is reduced in the whole recovery period and in the recovered retina to 84% of the control velocity. The importance of electrical coupling in the refractory phase and in the recovered tissue was examined by adding octanol (1 mM) to the perfusion solution. In this case the relative recovery phase was shortened and the field potential amplitude (110% of control) and propagation velocity (112% of control) are increased in the completely recovered retina. With the GABA(A)-chloride channel-activating drug diethylbarbiturate (800 microM) the propagation velocity (112% of control) and the amplitude of the field potential (111% of control) in the complete recovered retina are increased, but this seems to have no influence on the refractory state.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9606028     DOI: 10.1007/pl00005188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol        ISSN: 0028-1298            Impact factor:   3.000


  7 in total

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2.  Correlation between the durations of refractory period and intrinsic optical signal of retinal spreading depression during temperature variations.

Authors:  Marc S Weimer; Wolfgang Hanke
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4.  Refractory period modulates the spatiotemporal evolution of cortical spreading depression: a computational study.

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5.  Relevance of excitable media theory and retinal spreading depression experiments in preclinical pharmacological research.

Authors:  Fernandes de Lima V M; Hanke W
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6.  Migraine aura: retracting particle-like waves in weakly susceptible cortex.

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Review 7.  The Plastic Glial-Synaptic Dynamics within the Neuropil: A Self-Organizing System Composed of Polyelectrolytes in Phase Transition.

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  7 in total

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