Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Nitric Oxide of Neuronal Origin is Involved in Cerebral Blood Flow Increase during Seizures Induced by Kainate

71

Citations

38

References

1997

Year

Abstract

In a previous study, we reported that the sustained increase in CBF concomitant with seizures induced by kainate is mainly due to the potent vasodilator nitric oxide (NO). However, the production site of NO acting at cerebral vessels was undetermined. In the present study, we investigated whether NO responsible for the cerebral vasodilation is of either neuronal or endothelial origin. We used a putative selective inhibitor of neuronal NO synthase, 7-nitro indazole (7-NI). CBF was measured continuously in parietal cortex by means of laser Doppler flowmetry in awake rats. Systemic variables and electroencephalograms were monitored. Kainate (10 mg/kg i.p.) was given to rats previously treated with saline (n = 8) or 7-NI (25 mg/kg i.p., n = 8) or L-arginine (300 mg/kg i.p., n = 8) followed 30 min later by 7-NI (25 mg/kg i.p.). Under basal conditions, 7-NI decreased CBF by 27% without modifying the mean arterial blood pressure. Under kainate, 7-NI prevented significant increases in CBF throughout the seizures despite sustained paroxysmal electrical activity. L-arginine, the substrate in the production of NO, prevented any decrease in CBF under 7-NI in basal conditions and partially, but nonsignificantly, reversed the cerebrovascular influence of 7-NI during seizures. In a separate group of rats (n = 6), inhibition of cortical NO synthase activity by 7-NI was assayed at 73%. The present results show that neurons are the source of NO responsible for the cerebrovascular response to seizure activity after kainate systemic injection.

References

YearCitations

1976

225.3K

1976

209.3K

1990

3K

1988

2.6K

1989

1.8K

1994

530

1993

464

1993

375

1993

368

1993

337

Page 1