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Journal ArticleDOI

Protection against experimental ischemic spinal cord injury.

Catherine Robertson, +3 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 4, pp 633-642
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TLDR
Hypothermia and thiopental provided comparable protection against ischemic damage to rabbit spinal cord by pretreatment with agents that block neuronal activity and directly or indirectly reduce tissue metabolism, while magnesium pretreatment improved neurological outcome.
Abstract
The authors have studied the protection against ischemic damage to rabbit spinal cord by pretreatment with agents that block neuronal activity and directly or indirectly reduce tissue metabolism. Hypothermia, thiopental, magnesium, lidocaine, and naloxone were used to pretreat the spinal cord prior to ischemia. Hypothermia and thiopental provided comparable protection: they each increased the duration of ischemia required to produce neurological deficits in 50% of the animals from 26 to 41 minutes. They also increased from 10 to 30 minutes the time that the postsynaptic waves of the spinal somatosensory evoked potential (SSEP) could be absent and the animal still have neurological recovery. Hypothermia and thiopental, when used together, increased the duration of ischemia required to produce neurological deficits to 57 minutes in 50% of the animals. Naloxone increased the duration of ischemia required to produce neurological deficits to 36 minutes in 50% of the animals, and increased to 20 minutes the time that the postsynaptic waves of the SSEP could be absent and the animal still have neurological recovery. Magnesium pretreatment improved neurological outcome, possibly by improving collateral circulation as the SSEP did not fail completely during aortic occlusion in all animals. Lidocaine was not beneficial, perhaps because of the prolonged hypotension that resulted.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Application of therapeutic hypothermia in the ICU: opportunities and pitfalls of a promising treatment modality. Part 1: Indications and evidence.

TL;DR: Although induced hypothermia appears to be a highly promising treatment, it should be emphasized that it is associated with a number of potentially serious side effects, which may negate some or all of its potential benefits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of mononuclear phagocytes reduces ischemic injury in the spinal cord.

TL;DR: This drug combination decreased the number of mononuclear phagocytes found within the gray matter of damaged spinal cord, improved the recovery of function of the hindlimbs and bladder, preserved spinal somatosensory evoked potentials, and promoted the survival of motor neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Novel pharmacologic therapies in the treatment of experimental traumatic brain injury: a review.

TL;DR: Recent work suggesting that pharmacologic manipulation of endogenous systems by such diverse pharmacologic agents as anticholinergics, excitatory amino acid antagonists, endogenous opioid antagonists, catecholamines, serotonin antagonists, modulators of arachidonic acid, antioxidants and free radical scavengers, steroid and lipid peroxidation inhibitors, platelet activating factor antagonists, anion exchange inhibitors, magnesium, gangliosides, and calcium channel antagonists may improve functional outcome after brain injury is summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnesium protects against neurological deficit after brain injury.

TL;DR: The results suggest that postinjury treatment with MgCl2 is effective in limiting the extent of neurological dysfunction following experimental traumatic brain injury in the rat.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The interdependency of cerebral functional and metabolic effects following massive doses of thiopental in the dog.

TL;DR: It is concluded that there was no alteration in normal cerebral metabolic pathways, that cerebral metabolic effects of thiopental are secondary to functional effects, thatThiopental would provide no cerebral protection during hypoxia sufficient to abolish cerebral function, and that Thiopental does not uncouple oxidative phosphorylation in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Opiate antagonist improves neurologic recovery after spinal injury

TL;DR: Findings implicate endorphins in the pathophysiology of spinal cord injury and indicate that narcotic antagonists may have a therapeutic role in this condition.
Journal Article

On biological assays involving quantal responses

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the statistical method relevant to quantal assays from the viewpoint of individual responses and with a view to getting the apparatus for their explicit analysis, using the logistic function as a model for the distribution of the probability of responding as a function of dose or concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of anesthesia and hypothermia on canine cerebral ATP and lactate during anoxia produced by decapitation.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that anesthesia and hypothermia, although they have potentially similar effects on CMRo2, alter cerebral metabolic rate by dissimilar mechanisms, and cannot be expected to provide similar degrees of cerebral protection in the event of anoxia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of cerebral oxygen and glucose consumption in the dog by hypothermia, pentobarbital, and lidocaine.

TL;DR: It is concluded that pentobarbital has no inhibitory effect on cerebral metabolism in the absence of synaptic activity, while lidocaine—in addition to the effect related to suppression of synaptic transmission—has a specific “membrane stabilizing” effect.
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