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Calcium accumulation by glutamate receptor activation is involved in hippocampal cell damage after ischemia

192

Citations

18

References

1988

Year

Abstract

Rats exposed to 10 min of complete cerebral ischemia develop necrosis of the CA-1 region of the hippocampus after 2-3 days. We studied the involvement of synaptic transmission for this process by ablation of the afferent input (which is mainly glutamatergic) to CA1 by bilateral destruction of CA-3 neurons (Schafferotomi). The deafferentiation completely prevented the ischemic nerve cell destruction as revealed by histological studies after 6 days. The role of intracellular Ca++ overload was assessed by measurement of the interstitial Ca++ concentration. In control animals the interstitial Ca++ concentration decreases abruptly to 10% of the initial value 1.6 min after the onset of ischemia. The denervated hippocampi, however, showed no decrease during the 10 min of ischemia and hippocampi injected with 2-amino-5-phosphovalerate (APV), a competitive antagonist of the glutamate N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, displayed a significantly reduced decrease (45% of the initial value) during ischemia. It is concluded that calcium influx via the glutamate-operated channels during the ischemic period is an important link in the development of ischemic brain cell damage.

References

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