Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5813170 | Neuropharmacology | 2016 | 52 Pages |
Abstract
Recently we reported that fluoxetine (10Â mg/kg) improves functional recovery by attenuating blood spinal cord barrier (BSCB) disruption after spinal cord injury (SCI). Here we investigated whether a low-dose of fluoxetine (1Â mg/kg) and vitamin C (100Â mg/kg), separately not possessing any protective effect, prevents BSCB disruption and improves functional recovery when combined. After a moderate contusion injury at T9 in rat, a low-dose of fluoxetine and vitamin C, or the combination of both was administered intraperitoneally immediately after SCI and further treated once a day for 14Â d. Co-treatment with fluoxetine and vitamin C significantly attenuated BSCB permeability at 1Â d after SCI. When only fluoxetine or vitamin C was treated after injury, however, there was no effect on BSCB disruption. Co-treatment with fluoxetine and vitamin C also significantly inhibited the expression and activation of MMP-9 at 8Â h and 1Â d after injury, respectively, and the infiltration of neutrophils (at 1Â d) and macrophages (at 5Â d) and the expression of inflammatory mediators (at 2Â h, 6Â h, 8Â h or 24Â h after injury) were significantly inhibited by co-treatment with fluoxetine and vitamin C. Furthermore, the combination of fluoxetine and vitamin C attenuated apoptotic cell death at 1Â d and 5Â d and improved locomotor function at 5 weeks after SCI. These results demonstrate the synergistic effect combination of low-dose fluoxetine and vitamin C on BSCB disruption after SCI and furthermore support the effectiveness of the combination treatment regimen for the management of acute SCI.
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Authors
Jee Y. Lee, Hae Y. Choi, Tae Y. Yune,