Nitric Oxide Donors Increase Blood Flow and Reduce Brain Damage in Focal Ischemia: Evidence That Nitric Oxide is Beneficial in the Early Stages of Cerebral Ischemia
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
- Vol. 14 (2) , 217-226
- https://doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.1994.28
Abstract
We studied whether administration of nitric oxide (NO) donors reduces the ischemic damage resulting from middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs). In halothane-anesthetized and ventilated SHRs, the MCA was occluded. CBF was monitored using a laser-Doppler flowmeter. Three to five minutes after MCA occlusion, the NO donors sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 3 mg/kg/h) or 3-morpholino-sydnonimine (SIN 1; 1.5–6 mg/kg/h) were administered into the carotid artery for 60 min. As a control, the effect of papaverine (3.6 mg/kg/h), a vasodilator that acts independently of NO, was also studied. The hypotension evoked by these agents was counteracted by intravenous infusion of phenylephrine. At the end of the infusion, rats were allowed to recover. Stroke size was determined 24 h later in thionin-stained sections. In sham occluded rats, SNP (n = 5), SIN 1 (n = 5), and papaverine (n = 5) produced comparable increases in CBF (p > 0.05 from vehicle). After MCA occlusion, SNP (n = 5) and SIN 1 (n = 5), but not papaverine (n = 5), enhanced the recovery of CBF (p < 0.05 from vehicle) and reduced the size of the infarct by 28 ± 12 and 32 ± 7%, respectively (mean ± SD; p < 0.05 from vehicle). To determine whether NO donors could act by inhibiting platelet aggregation, we studied the effect of SNP on collagen-induced platelet aggregation. Intracarotid administration of SNP (3 mg/kg/h for 60 min) did not affect platelet aggregation to collagen, suggesting that the protective effect of NO donors was not due to inhibition of platelet function. We conclude that NO donors increase CBF to the ischemic territory and reduce the tissue damage resulting from focal ischemia. The protective effect may result from an increase in CBF to the ischemic territory, probably the ischemic penumbra. These findings suggest that NO donors may represent a new therapeutic strategy for the management of acute stroke.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of the cerebral microcirculation during neural activity: is nitric oxide the missing link?Trends in Neurosciences, 1993
- A novel neuronal messenger molecule in brain: The free radical, nitric oxideAnnals of Neurology, 1992
- The neuroprotective effect of a nitric oxide inhibitor in a rat model of focal cerebral ischaemiaBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1992
- Does nitric oxide mediate the increases in cerebral blood flow elicited by hypercapnia?Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Nitric oxide mediates glutamate neurotoxicity in primary cortical cultures.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991
- Parasympathetic Denervation of Rat Pial Vessels Significantly Increases Infarction Volume following Middle Cerebral Artery OcclusionJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1991
- The Biochemical Pathways of Nitric Oxide Formation from NitrovasodilatorsJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1991
- Cerebral hypoxia: some new approaches and unanswered questionsJournal of Neuroscience, 1990
- Different susceptibilities to cerebral infarction in spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and normotensive Sprague-Dawley rats.Stroke, 1986
- Thresholds in cerebral ischemia - the ischemic penumbra.Stroke, 1981