Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9423224 Brain Research Reviews 2005 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Cerebral ischemia induces excess release of glutamate and an increase in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration in neurons, which provokes enzymatic process leading to irreversible neuronal injury. Histamine plays a role as a neurotransmitter in the mammalian brain, and histamine release from nerve endings is enhanced in ischemia by facilitation of histaminergic activity. Dissimilar to ischemia-induced release of glutamate, histamine release is gradual and long lasting. The enhancement may contribute to neuroprotection against ischemic damage, because suppression of histaminergic activity aggravates the histologic outcome caused by ischemia. Preischemic administration of histamine (i.c.v.) suppresses ischemic release of glutamate and ameliorates neuronal damage, whereas blockade of central histamine H2 receptors aggravates ischemic injury. These suggest that histamine provides beneficial effects against ischemic damage through histamine H2 receptors, when administered before induction of ischemia. Postischemic loading with histidine, a precursor of histamine, alleviates both brain infarction and delayed neuronal death. Since the alleviation is abolished by blockade of central histamine H2 receptors, facilitation of central histamine H2 action caused by histidine may prevent reperfusion injury after ischemic events. Because the ischemia-induced increase in the glutamate level rapidly resumes after reperfusion of cerebral blood flow, beneficial effects caused by postischemic loading with histidine may be due to other mechanisms besides suppression of excitatory neurotransmitter release. Anti-inflammatory action by histamine H2 receptor stimulation is a likely mechanism responsible for the improvement.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
Authors
,