Role of histamine in brain protection in surgical brain injury in mice

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Abstract

Surgical resection of brain tissue is associated with tissue damage at the resection margin. Studies of ischemic brain injury in rodents have shown that administration of l-histidine and thioperamide reduces ischemic tissue loss, in part by inhibition of apoptotic cell death. In this study we tested administration of l-histidine and thioperamide in surgical brain injury in mice. Mice were randomized to one of three groups: Sham surgery (n = 18), surgical brain injury without treatment (SBI) (n = 33), and surgical brain injury with combined l-histidine and thioperamide treatment (SBI + H) (n = 29). Surgical brain injury was induced via right frontal craniotomy with resection of the right frontal lobe. l-histidine (1000 mg/kg) and thioperamide (5 mg/kg) were administered to the SBI + H group immediately following surgical resection. Postoperative assessment included neurobehavioral scores, Evans blue measurement of blood-brain barrier breakdown, brain water content, Nissl histology, and immunohistochemistry for IgG and cleaved caspase 3. Postoperative findings included equivalent neurobehavioral outcomes at 24 and 72 h in the SBI and SBI + H groups, similar histological outcomes between SBI and SBI + H, and similar qualitative staining for cleaved caspase 3. SBI + H had increased BBB breakdown on Evans blue analysis and a trend towards increased brain edema which was significant at 72 h. We conclude that combined treatment with l-histidine and thioperamide leads to increased BBB breakdown and brain edema in surgical brain injury. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Bravo, T. P., Matchett, G. A., Jadhav, V., Martin, R. D., Jourdain, A., Colohan, A., … Tang, J. (2008). Role of histamine in brain protection in surgical brain injury in mice. Brain Research, 1205, 100–107. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2008.01.102

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