Research report Reduction of brain injury by antithrombotic agent acutobin after middle cerebral artery ischemia/reperfusion in the hyperglycemic rat

2004 
In vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to observe the effect of acutobin, a purified thrombin-like enzyme (TLE), isolated from the snake venom of Deinagkistrodon acutus, on MRI-detected brain lesion volume and tissue perfusion deficit in a hyperglycemic rat right middle cerebral artery occlusion/reperfusion (MCAO/R) model. Acutobin (0.75 U/ml) was intravenously injected with a dosage of 2.5 U/kg body weight 30 min after MCAO (MCAO duration=60 min) and again 24 h after reperfusion. Multislice diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and single-slice dynamic bolus tracking gradient echo (GE) imaging were sequentially acquired before and after MCAO/R. DWIdetected lesion volume was significantly (pb0.05) reduced by 24–31% from 350F45, 369F45 and 374F36 mm 3 in the saline-treated group to 239F17, 282F26 and 259F32 mm 3 at 3, 4 and 24 h after reperfusion in the acutobin-treated group, respectively. Residual cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the right hemisphere recovered and remained at ~80% of normal perfusion over the measurement period in the acutobintreated group, compared to ~40% in the saline-treated group. Mortality at 1 week after MCAO/R in the acutobin-treated group was significantly lower (25% mortality) than the saline control group (85% mortality). Our results indicate that acutobin improves brain tissue perfusion and reduces infarct volume and mortality in the hyperglycemic rat MCAO/R model. D 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Theme: Disorders of the nervous system Topic: Ischemia
    • Correction
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    49
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []