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Elevation of the Extracellular Concentrations of Glutamate and Aspartate in Rat Hippocampus During Transient Cerebral Ischemia Monitored by Intracerebral Microdialysis
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1984
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Rats received 0.3‑mm hippocampal dialysis probes perfused with Ringer’s solution at 2 µl/min, and 5‑minute perfusate samples were collected before, during, and after a 10‑minute transient cerebral ischemia for amino‑acid analysis. During ischemia extracellular glutamate and aspartate rose 8‑ and 3‑fold, taurine increased 2.6‑fold, glutamine fell to 68 % of baseline, while alanine and serine remained unchanged, indicating that the glutamate/aspartate surge may contribute to post‑ischemic neuronal injury.
Abstract: Rats were implanted with 0.3‐mm‐diameter dialysis tubing through the hippocampus and subsequently perfused with Ringer's solution at a flow rate of 2 (μ1/min. Samples of the perfusate representing the extracellular fluid were collected over 5‐min periods and subsequently analyzed for contents of the amino acids glutamate, as‐partate, glutamine, taurine, alanine, and serine. Samples were collected before, during, and after a 10‐min period of transient complete cerebral ischemia. The extracellular contents of glutamate and aspartate were increased, respectively, eight‐and threefold during the ischemic period; the taurine concentration also was increased 2.6‐fold. During the same period the extracellular content of glutamine was significantly decreased (to 68% of the control value), whereas the concentrations of alanine and serine did not change significantly during the ischemic period. The concentrations of γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) were too low to be measured reliably. It is suggested that the large increase in the content of extracellular glutamate and aspartate in the hippocampus induced by the ischemia may be one of the causal factors in the damage to certain neurons observed after ischemia.
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