Focal cerebral ischemia in the cat: pretreatment with a competitive NMDA receptor antagonist, D-CPP-ene.
The effects of the competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist D-(E)-4-(3-phosphonoprop-2-enyl)piperazine-2-carboxylic acid (D-CPP-ene; SDZ EAA 494) upon ischemic brain damage have been examined in anesthetized cats. Focal cerebral ischemia was produced by permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and the animals were killed 6 h later. The amount of early ischemic brain damage was assessed in coronal sections at 16 predetermined stereotaxic planes. Pretreatment with D-CPP-ene (15 mg/kg i.v. followed by continuous infusion at 0.17 mg/kg/min until death), 15 min prior to MCA occlusion, significantly reduced the volume of ischemic brain damage (from 20.6 +/- 9.9% of the cerebral hemisphere in vehicle-treated cats to 7.2 +/- 4.4% in drug-treated cats; p less than 0.01). The competitive NMDA receptor antagonist D-CPP-ene is as effective as noncompetitive NMDA antagonists in reducing the amount of ischemic brain damage in this model of focal cerebral ischemia in a gyrencephalic species.[1]References
- Focal cerebral ischemia in the cat: pretreatment with a competitive NMDA receptor antagonist, D-CPP-ene. Bullock, R., Graham, D.I., Chen, M.H., Lowe, D., McCulloch, J. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. (1990) [Pubmed]
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