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Improvement of oxygen supply by an artificial carrier in combination with normobaric oxygenation decreases the volume of tissue hypoxia and tissue damage from transient focal cerebral ischemia

Authors :
Bastian Theisinger
Lothar Schilling
Robert H. Henning
Charalambos Tsagogiorgas
David J. Seiffge
Natalia Lapina
Groningen Kidney Center (GKC)
Vascular Ageing Programme (VAP)
Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT)
Source :
Experimental Neurology, 237(1), 18-25. ACADEMIC PRESS INC JNL-COMP SUBSCRIPTIONS

Abstract

Tissue hypoxia may play an important role in the development of ischemic brain damage. In the present study we investigated in a rat model of transient focal brain ischemia the neuroprotective effects of increasing the blood oxygen transport capacity by applying a semifluorinated alkane (SFA)-containing emulsion together with normobaric hyperoxygenation (NBO). The spread of tissue hypoxia was studied using pimonidazole given prior to filament-induced middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO, 2 h). Treatment consisted of intravenous injection of saline or the SFA-containing emulsion (0.5 or 1.0 ml/100g body weight; [SFA(0.5) or SFA(1.0)]) either upon establishing MCAO (early treatment) or after filament removal (delayed treatment). After injection NBO was administered for 8 h (early treatment) or 6 h (delayed treatment). Experiments were terminated 8 or 24 h after MCAO. In serial brain sections tissue hypoxia and irreversible cell damage were quantitatively determined. Furthermore, we studied hypoxia-related gene expression (VEGF, flt-1). Early treatment significantly (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00144886
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Neurology, 237(1), 18-25. ACADEMIC PRESS INC JNL-COMP SUBSCRIPTIONS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0fd8c89745c35611a6d4a3333f0d57b0