Abstract
1. The efficacy of the free radical trapping agent NXY-059 in reducing the infarct volume following both transient and permanent focal ischaemia has been examined in rats. 2. In the transient ischaemia model, rats were subjected to a 2 h occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA). Intravenous infusion of NXY-059 (1, 10 and 30 mg kg-1 h) for 21.75 h starting 2.25 h after the occlusion, produced a dose-dependent decrease in both neurological impairment and the histologically measured infarct volume (a mean 59% decrease at 10 mg kg-1 h). 3. In the permanent ischaemia model, animals were injected (s.c.) with a loading dose of NXY-059 of 32.5, 53.8 or 75.4 mg kg-1 and osmotic minipumps were implanted which had been primed to deliver respectively 30, 50 or 70 mg kg-1 h. When treatment was initiated 5 min after MCA occlusion there was a dose dependent protection of both cortical and sub-cortical tissue (cortex: 63% at the mid-range dose). Protection was related linearly to plasma concentration (plasma unbound NXY-059 concentration at 1 h:37 ± 16 μmol l-1 at the mid-range dose). 4. When the mid range dose was administered between 5 min -4 h after MCA occlusion, a marked and statistically significant protection was seen at all time points (44% protection in cortex at 4 h). 5. These data demonstrate the substantial neuroprotective efficacy of NXY-059 at plasma concentrations that can be achieved clinically and indicate that NXY-059 also has a therapeutic window of opportunity that is clinically relevant.
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Sydserff, S. G., Borelli, A. R., Green, A. R., & Cross, A. J. (2002). Effect of NXY-059 on infarct volume after transient or permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rat; studies on dose, plasma concentration and therapeutic time window. British Journal of Pharmacology, 135(1), 103–112. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0704449
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