Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8840524 | Neuroscience | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a well-known hemorrhagic stroke with high rates of morbidity and mortality where patients frequently experience cognitive dysfunction. This study explores a potential treatment for cognitive dysfunction following SAH with the demonstration that multi-target drug cattle encephalon glycoside and ignotin (CEGI) can relieve cognitive dysfunction by decreasing hippocampal neuron apoptosis following SAH in rats. Experimentally, 110 male SD rats were separated at random into Sham (20), SAHâ¯+â¯Vehicle (30), SAHâ¯+â¯4â¯ml/kg CEGI (30), and SAHâ¯+â¯1â¯ml/kg CEGI groups (30) and an endovascular perforation model was created to induce SAH. We discovered that the number of TUNEL-positive neurons in the hippocampus was markedly decreased in SAHâ¯+â¯4â¯ml/kg and SAHâ¯+â¯1â¯ml/kg CEGI groups compared to the SAHâ¯+â¯Vehicle group. This finding was associated with an observed decrease in Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, cytochrome-c and PUMA expression, and the suppression of caspase-3 activation following SAH. In Morris water maze tests, the SAHâ¯+â¯4â¯ml/kg CEGI group demonstrated a decreased escape latency time and increase in time spent in the target quadrant as well as crossing times of platform region. These results indicate that high doses of CEGI can decrease hippocampal neuron apoptosis and relieve cognitive dysfunction in rats, suggesting that multitarget-drug CEGI exhibits a neuroprotective effect in SAH via the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway.
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Neuroscience
Neuroscience (General)
Authors
Kang Ma, Rongwei Li, Hengli Zhao, Jie Qu, Ning Mu, Xin Liu, Shi Wang, Chuanyan Yang, Hua Feng, Liang Tan, Fei Li,